US, China hold ‘frank’ talks on hacking, maritime row

Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry shake hands prior to a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry shake hands prior to a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China.
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AFP, Washington :
Top US and Chinese officials were set to join “candid” talks Tuesday on the “complicated but consequential” ties between the world’s two leading economies, with maritime disputes and cyber hacking high on the agenda.
About 400 Chinese officials have converged on Washington for the high-level annual talks being hosted by Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry and Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew.
“The United States is firmly committed to improving its relationship with China,” said State Department spokesman John Kirby, about the seventh round of dialogue.
“While our countries disagree on many points, we recognize that there are many areas for mutually beneficial cooperation,” he told reporters, adding there was “no problem (that) can’t be better addressed with US-China cooperative efforts.”
The two-day Strategic and Economic Dialogue kicks off properly on Tuesday with Kerry and China’s State Councilor Yang Jiechi.
It will be Kerry’s first public appearance back at work since he broke his right leg in a cycling accident on May 31.
But Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken led initial closed-door talks Monday on the toughest dossier — security — with China’s Executive Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Yesui.
So far, the discussions have been “candid and to the point” in dealing with the “most sensitive issues in the relationship,” a senior State Department official said.
The security talks serve as the highest-level platform for military and civilian discussions seeking to manage their complex ties.
“The relationship between the United States and China is extremely broad. It’s also extremely complicated. But it’s very consequential,” the official said.
While there are important areas of cooperation such as the Iran nuclear talks, the situation in Afghanistan and the need to tackle climate change, there are also major differences.
“The talks are all the more important for the need to address these issues head-on, not try to paper them over, not try to agree to disagree, but to try to actually talk about them and see if we can… try to narrow the differences,” the official said.
The talks allowed the US to “break through stovepipes in the government… and deliver messages to people outside of our normal channels of communication,” the official added.
Chinese state news agency Xinhua reported that the sides agreed to work particularly on building a “stable” security relationship.
The world’s two leading economies remain at odds over China’s claims to much of the South China Sea and Washington has repeatedly urged Beijing to stop building artificial islands in the area.

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