President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping held a lengthy discussion about Taiwan on Thursday (Friday, July 29, 2022, as tensions mount between Washington and Beijing, despite Biden's hope of stabilizing the world's most important country-to-country relationship, Kevin Liptak, Arlette Saenz and Betsy Klein reported for CNN.
Photo Insert: US President Joe Biden speaks on the phone with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
The two leaders did agree to begin arrangements for a face-to-face summit, their first as Xi resists travel amid the COVID-19 pandemic. And certain areas of cooperation, including climate change, were hashed out.
But the Taiwan issue proved among the most contentious. The issue has emerged as a serious point of conflict, as US officials fear a more imminent Chinese move on Taiwan and as a potential visit by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi prompts warnings from Beijing.
There is little chance that China would use military force to prevent the visit as US aircraft carriers and squadrons of planes are ready to secure Pelosi’s plane.
The matter was discussed at length in the two-hour-and-17-minute phone call. Xi offered an ominous warning to Biden, according to China's version of events.
"Public opinion shall not be violated, and if you play with fire you get burned. I hope the US side can see this clearly," he told Biden, according to China's state news agency. The White House's account of the call was less specific.
"On Taiwan, President Biden underscored that the US policy has not changed and that the US strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait," a US readout read.
A senior US administration official called the Taiwan discussion "direct and honest" but downplayed Xi's warning, suggesting it was standard for the Chinese leader to warn about the risks of "playing with fire."
The phone call was Biden and Xi's fifth conversation since February 2021. Ahead of time, US officials said a range of topics -- from the tensions surrounding Taiwan to economic competition to the war in Ukraine -- were likely to arise.
But hopes for substantially improving ties with Beijing were low. Instead, Biden's aides hope maintaining a personal connection with Xi can, at most, avoid a miscalculation that might lead to confrontation.
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