Bilden wants to draw red lines in the conversation with Xi

Xi and Biden know each other from their time as vice presidents.

Joe Biden and Xi Jinping know each other from their time as vice presidents. (photo 2011)

Imago Stock&people

(dpa)

US President Joe Biden expects a frank exchange at his meeting with China’s leader Xi Jinping on Monday. “We just have to find out where the red lines are – and what are the most important things for each of us in the next two years,” Biden told journalists on Sunday on the sidelines of the Asean summit in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.

‘I know him well. He knows me,” Biden said. “I’ve spent more time with him than with any other leader in the world,” said the US president, referring to his previous meetings with Xi Jinping when both were vice presidents. “We always had open discussions.” There were “never any misunderstandings” between them. “I think that’s crucial for the relationship.”

Both presidents will meet on Monday for their first face-to-face meeting since Biden took office almost two years ago. The meeting comes ahead of the Group of Great Economic Powers (G-20) summit on the Indonesian island of Bali.

China-US relations are at a low ebb. Points of contention are China’s backing for Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Ukraine war, the ongoing trade war and sanctions against Chinese high-tech companies, China’s threats to democratic Taiwan and China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea.

China accuses the US of wanting to hinder its rise in the world. The US, in turn, increasingly sees China as an economic rival and threat. At the meeting, Biden also wants to address the tug-of-war over North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and its recent missile-testing provocations.

He is looking for a “constructive role” for China in the conflict, said his national security adviser Jake Sullivan. If North Korea continues on this path, the US is only likely to increase its military and security presence in the region. China has a vested interest in curbing North Korea’s “worst tendencies”.

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