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World

Biden sees pushback on China but ready to see Xi — aide

Agence France-Presse
Biden sees pushback on China but ready to see Xi � aide
This combination of file pictures created on June 08, 2021, shows US President Joe Biden (L) speaking at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, DC on June 2, 2021; and Chinese President Xi Jinping speaking on arrival at Macau's international airport on December 18, 2019. The US Senate was poised to pass a huge industrial policy bill on June 8, 2021, aimed at countering a surging economic threat from rival China, overcoming partisan divisions to pump more than $170 billion into research and development. The bill would need to return to the House of Representatives for a final vote, but it is expected to win final passage and be signed into law by President Joe Biden.
AFP / Mandel Ngan, Anthony Wallace

WASHINGTON, United States — A top aide said Thursday that US President Joe Biden's first foreign trip showed G7 and NATO unity in pushing back on Beijing but that Biden was also ready to meet his counterpart Xi Jinping.

Jake Sullivan, the national security advisor, said Biden showed an alternative to China by leading the Group of Seven in a new infrastructure initiative and that a NATO summit for the first time succeeded in "truly taking the security challenge posed by China seriously."

He also pointed to the resolution of the longstanding EU-US aviation feud as a message that the West is united "against China's predatory practices."

"The bottom line is that Joe Biden confidently and skillfully donned the mantle of leader of the free world on this trip," Sullivan told reporters.

"The previous president had ceded that mantle and this president has now emphatically reclaimed it," Sullivan said, referring to Donald Trump, who frequently clashed with US allies.

The summits have "laid the groundwork for proving out the case that democracies can deliver for their own people and for people around the world," Sullivan said.

His remarks came after expected criticism from Trump's Republican Party, which accused Biden of not being forceful enough.

The Biden administration, keeping the substance if not the tone of Trump's hawkish approach, has identified China as the pre-eminent global challenge due to its increasingly assertive policies both at home and abroad.

But Sullivan said that Biden would welcome a chance to speak further to Xi. 

The two had a lengthy phone call in February but in-person interaction has been limited to a tense meeting in March between Sullivan and Secretary of State Antony Blinken and top Chinese officials in Alaska.

After meeting another frequent US adversary, Russian President Vladimir Putin, in Geneva on Wednesday, Biden said there was no substitute for in-person talks.

Biden's view "also applies to China and President Xi Jinping. He will look for opportunities to engage with President Xi going forward," Sullivan said.

He said there were no plans scheduled to meet Xi but noted that both presidents were likely to take part in a summit in October in Italy of the Group of 20 major economies.

"Soon enough we will sit down to work out the right modality for the two presidents to engage," Sullivan said.

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JOE BIDEN

XI JINPING

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