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Trump says China can fix North Korea threat 'quickly and easily' and does not blame Beijing for trade deficit

President Xi Jinping says relationship between Beijing and Washington has hit 'new historical starting point'

Steve Holland
Beijing
,Christian Shepherd
Thursday 09 November 2017 06:50 GMT
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President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping during a joint press conference at the Great Hall of the People
President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping during a joint press conference at the Great Hall of the People (Andrew Harnik/AP)

US President Donald Trump called on China to do more to resolve the North Korean nuclear threat but says he does not blame Beijing for the trade deficit between the two nations during a Beijing visit that sought to play-up the strength of the US-China relationship.

On North Korea, Mr Trump said “China can fix this problem quickly and easily,” urging Beijing to cut financial links with North Korea and also calling on Russia to help.

Mr Trump was speaking alongside President Xi Jinping in the Chinese capital to announce the signing of about $250 billion in commercial deals between US and Chinese firms, a display that some in the US business community worry detracts from tackling deep-seated complaints about market access in China.

Mr Xi said the Chinese economy would become increasingly open and transparent to foreign firms, including those from the United States, and welcomed U.S. companies to participate in his ambitious “Belt and Road” infrastructure-led initiative.

Mr Trump made clear that he blamed previous US administrations, not China, for the trade imbalance between the two nations. "After all," he said, "who can blame a country for being able to take advantage of another country for benefit if their citizens?" Mr Trump also repeatedly praised Mr Xi, calling him “a very special man”.

“But we will make it fair and it will be tremendous for both of us,” Mr Trump said.

Mr Trump is pressing China to tighten the screws further on North Korea and its development of nuclear weapons. At least modest progress is hoped for, though there are no immediate signs of a major breakthrough, a US official said earlier.

Referring to Mr Xi, Mr Trump said: “I do believe there's a solution to that, as do you.”

In a show of the importance China puts on Mr Trump's first official visit, the welcoming ceremony outside Beijing's Great Hall of the People overlooking Tiananmen Square was broadcast live on state television - unprecedented treatment for a visiting leader.

Earlier on Thursday, Mr Xi said he had a deep exchange of views with Mr Trump and reached consensus on numerous issues of mutual concern.

“For China, cooperation is the only real choice, only win-win can lead to an even better future,” he said.

Chinese government orders all North Korean firms to close in China

Mr Xi said China and the United States strengthened high-level dialogue on all fronts over the past year and boosted coordination on major international issues, such as the Korean peninsula and Afghanistan.

“Relations between China and the United States are now on a new historical starting point,” Mr Xi said

Mr Trump and Mr Xi hit it off at their first meeting in April at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida and continued their “bromance” on Wednesday with an afternoon of sightseeing together with their wives. However, deep divisions persist over trade and North Korea.

And while Xi is riding high after consolidating power at a twice-a-decade Communist Party Congress last month, Trump comes to China saddled with low public approval ratings and dogged by investigations into Russian links to his election campaign.

Trump has ratcheted up his criticism of China's massive trade surplus with the United States - calling it “embarrassing” and “horrible” last week - and has accused Beijing of unfair trade practices.

For its part, China says US.restrictions on Chinese investments in the United States and on high-tech exports need to be addressed.

Several corporate chief executives were in Beijing as part of a delegation led by US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, with General Electric and semiconductor maker Qualcomm Inc among those announcing billions of dollars in sales to China.

But Qualcomm's agreement to sell $12-billion worth of components to three Chinese mobile phone makers over three years is non-binding, and critics say such public announcements are sometimes more show than substance.

“This shows that we have a strong, vibrant bilateral economic relationship, and yet we still need to focus on levelling the playing field because US companies continue to be disadvantaged doing business in China,” said William Zarit, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China.

Trump railed against China's trade practices during the 2016 US presidential campaign and threatened to take action once in office. But he has since held back on any major trade penalties, making clear he was doing so to give Beijing time to make progress reining in North Korea.

A US official said both sides were “in sync” about wanting to minimise friction during the visit and recreate the positive tone of the April summit.

Trump was not expected to put much emphasis in his talks with Mr Xi on thorny issues such as the disputed South China Sea and self-ruled Taiwan, claimed by China as its own, though the leaders' aides may deal with those matters privately.

China has repeatedly pushed back at suggestions it should be doing more to rein in North Korea, which does about 90 per cent of its trade with China, saying it is fully enforcing UN sanctions and that everyone has a responsibility to lower tension and get talks back on track.

Reuters

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