Wang, a Chinese state councillor and foreign minister, said
Beijing stood ready to reopen constructive dialogue with
Washington after relations between the two countries sank to
their lowest in decades under former president Donald Trump.
Wang called on Washington to remove tariffs on Chinese goods and
abandon what he said was an irrational suppression of the
Chinese tech sector, steps he said would create the "necessary
conditions" for cooperation.
Before Wang spoke at a forum sponsored by the foreign ministry,
officials played footage of the "ping-pong diplomacy" of 1972
when an exchange of table tennis players cleared the way for
then U.S. President Richard Nixon to visit China.
Wang urged Washington to respect China's core interests, stop
"smearing" the ruling Communist Party, stop interfering in
Beijing's internal affairs and stop "conniving" with separatist
forces for Taiwan's independence.
"Over the past few years, the United States basically cut off
bilateral dialogue at all levels," Wang said in prepared remarks
translated into English.
"We stand ready to have candid communication with the U.S. side,
and engage in dialogues aimed at solving problems."
Wang pointed to a recent call between Chinese President Xi
Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden as a positive step.
Washington and Beijing have clashed on multiple fronts including
trade, accusations of human rights crimes against the Uighur
Muslim minorities in the Xinjiang region and Beijing's
territorial claims in the resources-rich South China Sea.
The Biden administration has, however, signalled it will
maintain pressure on Beijing. Biden has voiced concern about
Beijing's "coercive and unfair" trade practices and endorsed of
a Trump administration determination that China has committed
genocide in Xinjiang.
However, Biden has also pledged to take a more multilateral
approach and is keen to cooperate with Beijing on issues like
climate change and persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear
weapons.
(Reporting by Gabriel Crossley; writing by Se Young Lee; Editing
by Christian Schmollinger and Jane Wardell)
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