Biden to meet Xi on Wednesday in San Francisco Bay area, U.S. officials
say
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[November 10, 2023]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden will meet Chinese President
Xi Jinping face-to-face for the first time in a year on Wednesday,
according to senior U.S. officials, high-stakes diplomacy aimed at
curbing tensions between the world's two superpowers.
The closely watched interaction, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in the San Francisco Bay area, could
last hours and involve teams of officials from Beijing and Washington.
It is expected to cover global issues from the Israel-Hamas war to
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, North Korea's ties with Russia, Taiwan,
the Indo-Pacific, human rights, fentanyl, artificial intelligence, as
well as "fair" trade and economic relations, the officials said.
"Nothing will be held back; everything is on the table," one senior
Biden administration official who declined to be named told reporters.
"We're clear-eyed about this. We know efforts to shape or reform China
over several decades have failed. But we expect China to be around and
to be a major player on the world stage for the rest of our lifetimes."
U.S. officials, who have been pushing for the meeting for the better
part of a year, believe Beijing has actively been working to undermine
U.S. policy around the world.
Biden and Xi will speak across oceans of ideological difference for the
first time since November 2022. The U.S. president's team engineered a
diplomatic blitz to repair hostile relations after Biden ordered the
shooting down of a suspected Chinese spy balloon that transited U.S.
skies in February.
A main result is expected to be greater diplomacy - promises to talk
more on key issues, including on climate, global health, economic
stability, counter-narcotic efforts and potentially the resumption of
some military-to-military channels after a high-level freeze.
Both sides may make modest gestures of goodwill to ease talks, according
to two other people briefed on the discussions.
But deep progress will be hard to come by. Both countries increasingly
regard themselves as locked in a direct competition to secure a military
edge, corner the 21st-century economy and win the affections of
second-tier countries, U.S. and Chinese officials say.
Efforts to carefully choreograph Xi's visit may be upended in the
restive Northern California city, which has a long history of left-wing
protest and agitation.
Biden and Xi have known each other for more than a decade and shared
hours of conversation over six interactions since Biden's 2021
inauguration. But both men come to the table with mutual suspicion,
grievances and garbled impressions of what the other is seeking,
analysts say.
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U.S. President Joe Biden shakes hands with Chinese President Xi
Jinping as they meet on the sidelines of the G20 leaders' summit in
Bali, Indonesia, November 14, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File
Photo
Among other sensitive topics, Biden is expected to raise Chinese
"influence operations" in foreign elections and the status of U.S.
citizens that Washington believes are wrongly detained in China.
Biden, 80, presides over an economy that has outperformed
expectations and most rich nations after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Unpopular with voters at home, he is seeking a second term in office
amid concerns about the stability of U.S. democracy.
Nonetheless, Biden has corralled the nation's traditional allies
from Europe to Asia to confront Russia in Ukraine, although some
have differences over the Israel-Hamas conflict.
Washington's long alliances, from NATO to the defense treaties in
the Pacific, are not-so-quietly being summoned in Asia to deter a
conflict with China.
Xi, a decade Biden's junior, has become the most powerful Chinese
leader since Mao Zedong, after tightening control over policy, state
leaders, the media and military and changing the constitution.
Recently, compounding economic challenges have thrown the country
off its three-decade, rocket-propelled growth trajectory.
Diplomats in Washington expect Beijing to test the United States in
coming weeks, taking advantage of the U.S.'s perceived shift in
focus on Ukraine and Israel, as it pursues its own ambitions in the
Indo-Pacific.
Biden is expected to tell Xi that U.S. commitments in the
Indo-Pacific are unchanged. China has worried its neighbors in
recent years with steps in the Taiwan Strait, South China Sea and
East China Sea, areas of international dispute. Biden will also
express a specific commitment to the security of the Philippines,
one of the U.S. officials said.
Biden is also expected to press Xi to impress on Iran that it would
be unwise to try to expand the conflict in the Middle East, the
official said.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons and
Stephen Coates)
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