China's Xi urges trade cooperation in
first meeting with Trump
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[April 07, 2017]
By Steve Holland
PALM BEACH, Fla. (Reuters) - Chinese
President Xi Jinping urged cooperation with the United States on trade
and investment on Thursday, inviting President Donald Trump to visit
China in a cordial start to their first meeting likely to broach
sensitive security and commercial issues.
Trump has said he wants to raise concerns about China's trade practices
and press Xi to do more to rein in North Korea's nuclear ambitions
during his two-day visit to the Spanish-style Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm
Beach, Florida, though no major deals on either issue are expected.
The two sides should promote the "healthy development of bilateral trade
and investment" and advance talks on a bilateral investment agreement,
Xi said, according to a statement on China's Foreign Ministry website.
"We have a thousand reasons to get China-U.S. relations right, and not
one reason to spoil the China-U.S. relationship," Xi told Trump.
Trump accepted Xi's invitation to China later this year, state news
agency Xinhua news agency cited officials as saying on Friday.
Xi and his wife, Peng Liyuan, joined Trump and his wife, Melania, at a
long table in an ornate candle-lit private dining room festooned with
red and yellow floral centerpieces, where they dined on pan-seared Dover
sole and New York strip steak.
Trump, a New York real estate magnate before he ran for office, joked
before dinner: "We've had a long discussion already, and so far I have
gotten nothing, absolutely nothing. But we have developed a friendship -
I can see that - and I think long term we are going to have a very, very
great relationship and I look very much forward to it."
The fanfare over the summit on Thursday was overshadowed by another
pressing foreign policy issue: the U.S. response to a deadly poison gas
attack in Syria. As Trump and Xi were wrapping up dinner, U.S. forces
fired dozens of cruise missiles at a Syrian airbase from which it said
the chemical weapons attack was launched this week, an escalation of the
U.S. military role in Syria that swiftly drew sharp criticism from
Russia.
In Beijing, China's Foreign Ministry urged all parties in Syria to find
a political settlement.
Trump and Xi were expected to get into more detailed discussions about
trade and foreign policy issues on Friday, concluding their summit with
a working lunch.
Trump promised during the 2016 presidential campaign to stop what he
called the theft of American jobs by China and rebuild the country's
manufacturing base. Many blue-collar workers helped propel him to his
unexpected election victory in November and Trump wants to deliver for
them.
"We have been treated unfairly and have made terrible trade deals with
China for many, many years. That's one of the things we are going to be
talking about," Trump told reporters ahead of the meeting.
The bilateral investment treaty mentioned by Xi, talks on which began
during former president George W. Bush's administration and resumed
under Barack Obama, has received little attention since Trump took
office.
Trump is still finding his footing in the White House and has yet to
spell out a strategy for what his advisers called a trade relationship
based on "the principle of reciprocity."
He brought his top economic and national advisers to Florida for the
meeting, including Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin, and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.
"Even as we share a desire to work together, the United States does
recognize the challenges China can present to American interests," said
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, also in Florida for the meeting.
Trump's daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner, who both work
at the White House, also were among the dinner guests.
DIFFERING PERSONALITIES
The summit brings together two leaders who could not seem more
different: the often stormy Trump, prone to angry tweets, and Xi,
outwardly calm, measured and tightly scripted, with no known social
media presence.
[to top of second column] |
Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with President Donald
Trump as he is accompanied by China's first lady Peng Liyuan during
a dinner at the start of a summit between President Trump and
President Xi at Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach,
Florida. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
What worries the protocol-conscious Chinese more than policy clashes
is the risk that the unpredictable Trump could publicly embarrass
Xi, after several foreign leaders experienced awkward moments with
the new U.S. president.
"Ensuring President Xi does not lose face is a top priority for
China," a Chinese official said.
The most urgent problem facing Trump and Xi is how to persuade
nuclear-armed North Korea to halt unpredictable behavior like
missile test launches that have heightened tensions in South Korea
and Japan.
North Korea is working to develop an intercontinental ballistic
missile capable of hitting the United States.
Trump has threatened to use trade to try to force China to exert
influence over Pyongyang.
"I think China will be stepping up," Trump told reporters on
Thursday. Beijing says its influence is limited and that it is doing
all it can.
The White House is reviewing options to pressure Pyongyang
economically and militarily, including "secondary sanctions" against
Chinese banks and firms that do the most business with Pyongyang.
A long-standing option of pre-emptive strikes remains on the table,
but despite the tougher recent U.S. talk, the internal review
"de-emphasizes direct military action," the U.S. official said,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
Analysts believe any military action would likely provoke severe
North Korean retaliation and massive casualties in South Korea and
Japan and among U.S. troops stationed there.
NO GRAND BARGAIN ON TRADE
On trade, U.S. labor leaders say Trump needs to take a direct,
unambiguous tone in his talks with Xi.
"President Trump needs to come away from the meeting with concrete
deliverables that will restore production and employment here in the
U.S. in those sectors that have been ravaged by China's predatory
and protectionist practices," said Holly Hart, legislative director
for the United Steelworkers union.
A U.S. administration official told Reuters that Washington expects
to have to use legal tools to fight for U.S. companies, such as
pursuing World Trade Organization lawsuits.
"I don't expect a grand bargain on trade. I think what you are going
to see is that the president makes very clear to Xi and publicly
what we expect on trade," a U.S. official told Reuters, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Trump has often complained Beijing undervalues its currency to boost
trade, but his administration looks unlikely to formally label China
a currency manipulator in the near term - a designation that could
come with penalties.
(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom, Matt Spetalnick, Roberta
Rampton, Ayesha Rascoe and Mohammad Zargham in Washington, Gui Qing
Koh in New York, Michael Martina in Beijing and William Mallard in
Tokyo; Editing by Lisa Shumaker, James Dalgleish and Nick Macfie)
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