JAKARTA (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State top Antony Blinken held “candid and constructive” talks with top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi on Thursday in Indonesia’s capital, an official said, the latest in a series of interactions Washington says are aimed at managing competition between the rival superpowers.
Wang is representing China at the Jakarta meetings of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and partner countries after Beijing said Foreign Minister Qin Gang would not attend due to health reasons.
He and Blinken were seen seated across from each other in a meeting room in a hotel in central Jakarta and did not speak to the press.
The “candid and constructive discussions” covered both areas of difference and potential cooperation, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.
“The meeting was part of ongoing efforts to maintain open channels of communication to clarify U.S. interests across a wide range of issues and to responsibly manage competition by reducing the risk of misperception and miscalculation,” Miller said.
The U.S. top diplomat also emphasized the importance of “maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, Miller said.
Blinken met Qin and Wang in Beijing last month, marking the first visit to China by a U.S. secretary of state in five years. It was aimed at easing the intense rivalry between the superpowers, which are also the world’s two largest economies
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen visited China earlier this month and climate envoy John Kerry is to visit next week.
Wang, who is the foreign policy chief for the Chinese Communist Party, ranks above Qin, who as the foreign minister is the government’s foreign policy chief.
China’s ambassador to the United States held a rare meeting at the Pentagon on Wednesday with the top U.S. defense official for Asia, the Pentagon said, in talks that followed U.S. criticism of Chinese reluctance to engage in military communications.
Analysts see the meetings as part of efforts to clear the way for a summit between President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping later in the year, but tensions remain high.
Blinken’s last meeting with Wang Yi in Beijing appeared to be the thorniest of his visit, with Wang telling him the “root cause” of their discord was “U.S. misperceptions of China” and its “misguided China polices”, according to a Chinese readout.
While Washington is seeking to put a floor under relations, which Beijing has described as at their lowest point since the establishment of diplomatic ties, the two sides remain at odds over a range of trade, security and geopolitical issues.
On Taiwan, the democratic island which Beijing claims as its own, Wang’s tone at his last meeting with Blinken was particularly pointed.
“China has no room for compromise or concessions,” said Wang, according to the readout.
The U.S. is bound by law to provide Taiwan with the means to protect itself but has long stuck to a policy of “strategic ambiguity” over whether it would respond militarily to an attack on Taiwan, which Beijing has refused to rule out.
Last week, the senior State Department official for East Asia, Daniel Kritenbrink, said Blinken would work with ASEAN members in Jakarta in response to “an upward trend of unhelpful and coercive and irresponsible Chinese actions.”
(Reporting by Gayatri Suroyo in Jakarta, David Brunnstrom and Simon Lewis in Washington; Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Michael Perry, Raju Gopalakrishnan and Alistair Bell)