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President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday discussed Taiwan, synthetic intelligence and security issues in a call meant to demonstrate a return to normal leader-to-leader discussion between the two powers.
It was the first verbal exchange between the leaders since their November summit in California, which resulted in renewed ties between the two countries’ militaries and the promise of greater cooperation to stop deadly fentanyl and its precursors coming from China.
The call also marks the beginning of several weeks of high-level engagements between the two countries, with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen traveling to China on Thursday and Secretary of State Antony Blinken in the coming weeks.
Biden has pushed for sustained interactions at all levels of government, believing that this is imperative to prevent the festival between the two major economies and the nuclear powers from escalating into a direct conflict. Although in-person summits are held once a year, the officials said, Washington and Beijing recognize the price of more common compromises between leaders.
The two leaders discussed Taiwan ahead of next month’s inauguration of Lai Ching-te, the island’s president-elect, who has pledged to safeguard its de facto independence from China and bring it more into line with other democracies. Biden reaffirmed the long-standing U. S. stance. China regards Taiwan as an internal factor and has strongly protested against the U. S. over the island.
Biden also raised considerations about China’s operations in the South China Sea, adding efforts last month to save the Philippines, to which the U. S. is bound by the treaty, from restocking its forces at the disputed Second Thomas Bank.
Next week, Biden will host Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House for a joint summit where China’s influence in the region is expected to be one of the most sensitive issues on the agenda.
Biden, in the call with Xi, suggested China do more to fulfill its commitments to prevent the flow of illegal narcotics and schedule more precursor chemicals to save their export. The pledge was made at the Leaders’ Summit held in Woodside, California, last year on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting.
At the November summit, Biden and Xi also agreed that their governments would hold formal discussions on the promises and dangers of complex synthetic intelligence, which they are expected to take positions in the coming weeks. The two men discussed the factor on Tuesday, just two weeks away. after China and the U. S. joined more than 120 countries in backing a United Nations solution calling for global safeguards around emerging technology.
Biden, in the call, reinforced warnings to Xi about his opposition to interfering in the 2024 U. S. election due to ongoing malicious cyberattacks on critical U. S. infrastructure, according to a senior U. S. administration official who viewed the call on condition of anonymity.
He also raised considerations about human rights in China, adding Hong Kong’s restrictive new national security law and treatment of minority groups, and discussed the plight of Americans detained or barred from leaving China.
The Democratic president has also singled out China for its defense relationship with Russia, which is seeking to rebuild its trade base while continuing its invasion of Ukraine. And he has called on Beijing to exert its influence on North Korea to rein in the remote and erratic nuclear power. .
As leaders of the world’s two largest economies, Biden also raised considerations with Xi about China’s “unfair economic practices,” the official said, reaffirming that the U. S. would take steps to safeguard its security and economic interests, adding that it would proceed to restrict transfers of secure complex technologies to China.
Yellen’s call comes ahead of Yellen’s call to Guangzhou and Beijing for a week of bilateral meetings on the issue with monetary leaders from the world’s second-largest economy, joined by Vice Premier He Lifeng, China’s central bank governor Pan Gongsheng and former Vice Premier Liu He, of the United States. business and local leaders.
A document for the next says Yellen will “advocate with U. S. staff and businesses to ensure they are treated fairly, and will also press their Chinese counterparts on unfair industrial practices. “
Ahead of her trip to China, Yellen said last week that Beijing was flooding the market with green energy that “distorts global prices. “He said he intends to share with his counterparts his confidence that Beijing’s increased production of solar power, electric cars and lithium-ion batteries pose dangers to productivity and the expansion of the global economy.
Renewed anxiety among U. S. lawmakers over Chinese ownership of popular social media app TikTok has led to a new law that would ban TikTok if its China-based owner, ByteDance, sells its stake in the platform within six months of the bill being enacted.
As chair of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which examines foreign ownership of companies in the United States, Yellen has a great deal of freedom in determining how the company could continue to operate in the United States.
Meanwhile, China’s leaders have set a 5% economic expansion target this year, despite a slowdown exacerbated by turmoil in the asset sector and the lingering effects of strict anti-virus measures taken during the COVID-19 pandemic that disrupted travel, logistics, production and other industries.
China is the dominant player in the EV battery sector and has an expanding automotive industry that may challenge the world’s established automakers as it goes global.
Last year, the U. S. The U. S. Department of Agriculture (FDA) has outlined plans to prevent EV buyers from claiming tax credits if they buy vehicles containing battery materials from China and other countries deemed hostile to the U. S. U. S. In addition, the Ministry of Commerce has launched an investigation into possible risks to national security. Chinese car exports to the United States.
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