Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-02-15
China and the United States on Friday agreed to advance a new model of ties between major powers as US Secretary of State John Kerry visited Beijing for talks.
| John Kerry and Xi Jinping during their meeting in Beijing, Feb. 14. (Photo/CNS) |
China and the United States on Friday agreed to advance a new model of ties between major powers as US Secretary of State John Kerry visited Beijing for talks.
"China
is firmly committed to building a new model of major-country relationship
between China and the United States together with the US side," Chinese
President Xi Jinping said in his 70-minute meeting with Kerry at the Great Hall
of the People.
China will
continue to enhance dialogue, boost mutual trust and cooperation and properly
handle differences in the new year so as to forge ahead with the lasting and
healthy development of the ties, the president said.
Xi and
President Barack Obama held a historic summit last June at the Annenberg
Retreat in California, during which they reached an agreement on building a new
type of major-country relationship which features no conflict, no
confrontation, mutual respect, cooperation and common prosperity.
Echoing
Xi's remarks, Kerry said managing the new model of relationship between great
powers is "very important" for the United States as well.
He told Xi
that President Obama "is very much looking forward to seeing you again
shortly."
"Xi's
remarks sent a stable and positive signal for China-US ties, which means the
two countries' general target and roadmap to a new model of relationship remain
unchanged, though they sometimes have discord," said Da Wei, a research
fellow at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations.
Kerry's
visit came as the two countries celebrated the 35th anniversary of their
diplomatic ties at the beginning of this year.
Apart from
Xi, Kerry met other Chinese leaders and senior officials during his 24-hour
visit, including Premier Li Keqiang, State Councilor Yang Jiechi and Foreign
Minister Wang Yi.
In talks with
Kerry, Wang said the two countries should respect and accommodate each other's
core interests and major concerns, calling on the two to "accumulate and
unleash the positive energy of the relationship and promote it towards
continuous progress on the right track."
Hailing his
meeting with President Xi as "very constructive and positive," Kerry
told Wang that he hoped 2014 will be "a year of concrete progress" in
building a new type of relationship, and "managing bilateral differences
effectively and finding a way to cooperate practically when possible."
The two
sides also reached "broad consensus" on this year's high-level
engagements, dialogue and concrete cooperation in various areas.
They agreed
to start preparation early for new round of Strategic and Economic Dialogue —
scheduled for China this summer — and Consultation on People-to-People
Exchange, promote an early signing of a bilateral investment agreement, and try
to build a mechanism to inform each other about major military actions.
They also
discussed cooperation on antiterrorism, nonproliferation,climate change, and
other major international and regional issues.
"The
two countries stepped up their discussion on bilateral cooperation in wide
range of issues, with the aim to flesh out the new model of relationship with
concrete actions and reciprocal cooperation," Da said.
Apart from
bilateral ties, the Korean nuclear impasse is high on the agenda. "China
will never allow chaos or war on the Korean Peninsula," Wang told Kerry in
the talks.
"China
is serious in this, as shown not only in our words but in our actions," he
said, adding the top priority at the moment is to resume six-party talks as
soon as possible.
"At
every level in all our conversations today, China could have not more
forcefully reiterated its commitment to that goal," said Kerry in a press
briefing Friday evening.
China has
always played a role in trying to solve the Korean nuclear issue, said Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying in response to Kerry's remarks in Seoul,
appealing for China to do more.
China has
been persuading all parties involved through all channels, and maintaining
close communication with them, she said.
"China
and the United States share the same goal of regional peace, stability and
denuclearization. They are just different in how to realize such a goal,"
said Huang Ping, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
With regard
to the South China Sea and East China Sea disputes, China reiterated its stance
and reaffirmed determination to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial
integrity.
Wang urged
the United States to take an objective and impartial stance, and not to
"take a side."
The United
State should respect historical facts and China's sovereign interests, and take
tangible action to promote mutual trust in the region so as to safeguard
regional peace and stability, he added.
Kerry
arrived in Beijing from Seoul Friday morning for his 24-hour China visit.
This is his
second visit to China and his fifth to Asia since he took office in February
last year. His four-leg visit will also take him to Indonesia and the United
Arab Emirates.
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