Blinken is on the second trip to China as secretary of state to tackle a series of contentious issues, including trade, human rights, and Russia’s Ukraine war.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken brought up China’s non-market trade practices and called on the communist regime to provide U.S. businesses with a level playing field, in the first stop of his China visit.
China and the United States have “an obligation for our people and, indeed, an obligation for the world to manage the relationship between our two countries responsibly,” Mr. Blinken said ahead of a meeting with Chen Jining, Shanghai’s Communist Party chief, on Thursday morning.
Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement that Mr. Blinken raised concerns about Beijing’s “trade policies and non-market economic practices.”
The secretary of state also used the meeting to stress that the United States seeks “healthy economic competition” with communist China and “a level playing field for U.S. workers and firms operating in China,” the statement added.
Earlier this month, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen confronted senior Chinese officials about the country’s overproduction, saying it is “too large for the rest of the world to absorb this enormous capacity.”
Despite the growing backlash over its trade practices, the Chinese regime appeared undeterred. At a regular briefing later on Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin contended that the regime conducted economic and trade cooperation “in accordance with market principles.”
He called Washington to work with the regime to “create favorable conditions for the sound and stable development of China-U.S. economic and trade relations.”
Tough Talks
Mr. Blinken’s second trip to China as secretary of state took place as the United States and communist China remained at odds on a series of issues ranging from the crisis in Ukraine and the Middle East to the status of Taiwan.
China has voiced objections to U.S. aid to Taiwan, a self-ruled island that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) viewed as a breakaway province, warning that it “will not bring security” to Taipei.
Mr. Blinken is set to meet Wang Yi, the CCP’s top diplomat, on Friday. China hasn’t confirmed whether Mr. Blinken will sit down with Xi Jinping, the Party’s boss. Mr. Xi received the visiting secretary of state in Beijing last July, but their talk wasn’t publicly confirmed until shortly before it took place.
Robert Gilchrist, a senior official for the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Affairs, told reporters that Mr. Bliken will “raise human rights at the highest levels and in the clearest way” while in China.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!