Premier Wen meets US Deputy Secretary of State (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-01-24 17:11
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao met with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert B.
Zoellick here Tuesday.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick
(L) shakes hand with China's Premier Wen Jiabao at the Diaoyutai State
Guest House in Beijing January 24, 2006. Zoellick was in Beijing on
Tuesday to hold talks with senior Chinese officials and expected to cover
nuclear standoffs with Iran and North Korea.
[Reuters] |
They exchanged views on Sino-U.S. relations as well as international and
regional issues of common concern, according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry
official who failed to disclose any details.
Zoellick arrived here Monday night on a three-day visit to China.
Zoellick will also hold talks with Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Dai Bingguo
to review the issues addressed in the December 2005 U.S.-China Strategic
Dialogue that they led, and review preparations for the next meeting later in
the year, according to a statement posted on the official website of the U.S.
Department of State.
The statement quoted Zoellick as saying that the United States and China are
two large and important stake holders in the international system, and it is in
their shared interest to listen to one another.
"I look forward to a good exchange of views in Beijing on security and
proliferation issues -- particularly in Northeast Asia, and Iran -- the upcoming
conference on Afghanistan in London, China's efforts to promote internal
openness and reform, and China's recent white paper on Africa," he said.
The statement described Zoellick's visit to China as "another step in finding
ways in enhanced cooperation between the United States and China within the
framework that Zoellick outlined in his Sept. 21, 2005 speech in New York, in
which he proposed that the United States must step up efforts to make China a
"responsible stakeholder" in the international system.
After Beijing, Zoellick will travel to Chengdu, capital of southwest China's
Sichuan Province, where he will meet with senior local government officials and
visit a panda research base in Chengdu.
China and the United States held two rounds of strategic talks in August and
December last year on issues including trade, intellectual property protection,
the Taiwan issue, bird flu, the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula and the
RMB exchange rate.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan made a positive comment on the
current China-U.S. relations at the previous press briefing. "Though facing with
some problems, bilateral relations are heading forward in an unprecedented width
and depth," Kong said, adding that the two countries need to keep constant
contacts and frequent exchange of views.
China is Zoellick's second leg of a three-nation tour. Zoellick will leave
China for the World Economic Forum meetings in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday.
He started his tour from Japan, where he stayed from Jan. 22 to 23.
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