BEIJING (AP)
-- President Donald Trump has reaffirmed America's long-standing "one
China" policy in a phone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping,
potentially alleviating concerns about a major shift in Washington's relations
with Beijing.
The White
House and China's state broadcaster CCTV said the two spoke at length by phone
on Thursday evening.
The two
leaders discussed numerous topics and Trump agreed "at the request of
President Xi" to honor the "one China" policy that requires
Washington to maintain only unofficial ties with China's rival Taiwan, the
White House said.
CCTV
reported that Xi "praised" Trump's affirmation and said China was
willing to work with the U.S. to enhance ties and bring "more fruitful
gains for the benefit of our two peoples and those in every country."
The White
House described the call as "extremely cordial" and said the two
leaders had invited each other to visit their respective countries and looked
forward to further discussions.
Some had
questioned why Trump had taken so long to call Xi given that he'd already
spoken with more than a dozen world leaders. Chinese observers had also noted
that Trump had broken with his predecessors in not extending good wishes to the
Chinese people on the occasion of last month's Lunar New Year holiday, prior to
the issuing of a belated greeting on Wednesday.
Trump has
accused Beijing of unfair trade practices, criticized China's military buildup
in the South China Sea and said Beijing is doing too little to pressure North
Korea over its nuclear and missile programs.
China claims
Taiwan as its own territory and complained after Trump upset decades of
diplomatic precedent by talking by phone with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen
shortly after winning November's presidential election.
In December,
Trump said in an interview that he didn't feel "bound" by the
decades-old one China policy unless the U.S. could gain concessions from China
in trade and other areas. Washington has robust unofficial relations with the
island and provides it with arms to guard against Beijing's threat to use force
to reunify with it.
Underscoring
uncertainty in the relationship, the call between the leaders came as the U.S.
Pacific Command reported a Chinese jet and a U.S. Navy patrol plane had an
"unsafe" encounter over the South China Sea this week.
Pacific
Command spokesman Robert Shuford said Friday that the "interaction"
between a Chinese KJ-200 early warning aircraft and a U.S. Navy P-3C plane took
place on Wednesday in international airspace. He did not say what was unsafe
about the encounter.
Shuford says
the U.S. plane was on a routine mission and operating according to
international law.
The Chinese
defense ministry has not responded to a faxed request for comment.
China
routinely complains about U.S. military surveillance missions close to its
southern island province of Hainan, which is home to numerous sensitive
military installations.
A collision
between a U.S. EP-3 surveillance plane and a Chinese naval air force jet in
April 2001 resulted in the death of the Chinese pilot and the 10-day detention
of the U.S. air crew by China.
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