“China looks positively on the fresh progress made in China-US relations, and we are willing to work together with the United States in promoting the advance of healthy and stable China-US relations,” Hu told director of the US National Economic Council, Lawrence Summers, and Deputy National Security Adviser Thomas Donilon.
Addressing the security and economic spats that have dragged down relations was at the heart of Summers’ and Donilon’s three days of meetings in Beijing. With an anemic economy and his Democratic Party under pressure in upcoming congressional elections, President Barack Obama is hoping for concessions from Beijing on exchange rate policies that critics say keep the Chinese currency too low, thereby subsidizing Chinese exports and contributing to high US unemployment.
Hu, in the meantime, is trying to strengthen his political hand ahead of a delicate Communist Party leadership transition and maintain the popularity of his government with people grown used to high rates of economic growth in part buoyed by trade with the United States.
The Hong Kong newspaper South China Morning Post reported Wednesday, citing unnamed Chinese diplomats, that the governments had agreed to resume military talks that Beijing suspended earlier this year in pique at US weapons sales to Chinese rival Taiwan.
US National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said Donilon and Summers had “productive, detailed, and wide-ranging discussions with Chinese officials” and that the visit, which concluded Wednesday, “advanced the goal of strengthening the US-China relationship.”
Hammer said in a statement that the advisers discussed North Korea and Iran, both of which have been sanctioned by the international community for their nuclear programs.
As permanent members of the UN Security Council, China and the US have frequently locked horns over how to persuade Iran and North Korea to give up those programs, with Washington tending to favor sanctions and Beijing advocating dialogue and diplomatic means. Other economic and security issues also were raised, Hammer said, but gave no specifics.
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