Biden-Xi talks: Leaders begin first face-to-face virtual summit
US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi
Jinping have begun their first face-to-face virtual summit
The highly anticipated meeting comes as tensions rise
between the world's two biggest economies on issues like Taiwan, trade and
human rights.
Mr Biden said both countries had a responsibility to ensure
their rivalry did not "veer into open conflict".
This is the most substantial talks both leaders have had
since Mr Biden took office in January.
What was
said at the meeting?
Both men greeted each other warmly, with Mr Xi saying he was
happy to see his "old friend" Biden.
For his part, Mr Biden said, "Maybe I should start more
formally, although you and I have never been that formal with one another,"
according to a Reuters report.
He added that both men had "always communicated with
one another very honestly and candidly", adding "we never walk away
wondering what the other man is thinking".
Mr Xi said the two countries needed to improve "communication"
and face challenges "together".
He also said healthy China-US relations were needed in order
to face global challenges like climate change and Covid-19, Chinese state media
said.
The competing nations surprised many last week by issuing a joint declaration to address climate change, at talks in Glasgow, Scotland.
"Humanity lives in a global village, and we face
multiple challenges together. China and the U.S. need to increase communication
and cooperation." said Mr Xi.
Mr Biden added that they needed to establish some
"common sense guardrails".... "to ensure that our competition
between our countries does not veer into conflict".
"(W)e believe - and you and I have talked about this -
all countries have to play by the same rules of the road, and why the United
States is always going to stand up for our interests and values and those of
our allies and partners," he said.
What issues are on the table?
Mr Biden's comments appear to be a nod to Taiwan - a point
of growing contention between both countries.
Beijing views Taiwan as a breakaway province, but democratic
Taiwan sees itself as a sovereign state.
The US has been increasingly vocal about its commitment to
defending Taiwan.
Mr Biden said last month that the US would defend Taiwan if
China attacked, in an apparent departure from a long-held US foreign policy
position of "strategic ambiguity" which has seen Washington being
deliberately vague about what it would actually do.
Issues like cybersecurity, trade and nuclear
non-proliferation are also subjects on the table.
In a statement released on Friday, the White House said
"the two leaders will discuss ways to responsibly manage the competition
between the United States and the PRC, as well as ways to work together where
our interests align".
This is the third time the two leaders have spoken since Mr
Biden's inauguration in January. The meeting is expected to last several hours.
Mr Xi has not left China in nearly two years, since the
outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The China-US relationship is crucial to both sides and the
wider world, with Beijing repeatedly having called on the new administration in
Washington to improve relations which deteriorated under Mr Biden's
predecessor, Donald Trump.
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