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Senior US diplomat in China on fence-mending mission

US hopes to make up soon with China
Washington (AFP) March 1, 2010 - The United States said Monday it hoped ties with China would quickly return to normal after a rough patch in which President Barack Obama approved arms sales to Taiwan and met the Dalai Lama. "We've gone through a bit of a bumpy path here and I think there's an interest, both within the United States and China, to get back to business as usual as quickly as possible," State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg was due in China on Tuesday along with Jeffrey Bader, Obama's top Asia adviser on the White House's National Security Council. "I think this will be an opportunity to refocus on the future and... express our views in a straightforward way to our interlocutors from China," Crowley told reporters.

When taking office in January 2009, Obama pledged to broaden relations between the world's largest developed and developing economies on issues such as reviving the global economy and fighting global change. After avoiding most divisive issues in his first year, Obama in January approved a 6.4 billion-dollar arms package to Taiwan and last month met with the Dalai Lama, triggering Chinese warnings that he was jeopardizing relations. Beijing considers Taiwan, where the mainland's defeated nationalists fled in 1949, to be a rebel province awaiting reunification. China vilifies the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader who fled his homeland in 1959.

Relations between the United States and China have also been affected by Internet giant Google's threats to pull out of the emerging Asian market due to cyberattacks it reported on the company and the accounts of rights activists. Steinberg and Bader will head on Thursday to Japan, whose longstanding alliance with the United States has experienced hiccups since left-leaning Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama took office last year.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 2, 2010
A senior US diplomat was due in China Tuesday for talks aimed at putting Sino-US relations back on track, with tensions high over US arms sales to Taiwan and a White House visit by the Dalai Lama.

US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg will also focus on efforts to bring North Korea back to stalled nuclear disarmament negotiations, and try to persuade Beijing to back new sanctions against Iran over its atomic drive.

State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said Beijing and Washington needed to put aside their differences -- over everything from Taiwan and Tibet to Internet freedom and the value of the yuan -- to move forward.

"We've gone through a bit of a bumpy path here and I think there's an interest, both within the United States and China, to get back to business as usual as quickly as possible," Crowley told reporters on Monday.

Crowley said the visit offered an opportunity to "refocus on the future" of relations between the United States and China, the world's largest and third-largest economies.

But Steinberg faced a tough task, as Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang on Tuesday reiterated Beijing's longstanding position that Washington was to blame for the array of problems in the trans-Pacific partnership.

"The responsibility for the current difficulty in China-US relations goes completely to the US side," Qin told reporters. "We hope the US side takes the Chinese position seriously."

Steinberg, who will be accompanied by Jeffrey Bader, US President Barack Obama's top Asia adviser on the National Security Council, will head to Tokyo on Thursday for talks with Japanese officials before heading home.

When he took office in January 2009, Obama promised to broaden the Sino-US relationship and in July he said their ties would "shape the 21st century".

The US president made his maiden official visit to China with much fanfare in November.

But since then ties have faltered, with Beijing angry over the January approval of a 6.4-billion-dollar arms package to Taiwan and Obama's meeting last month at the White House with the Dalai Lama.

China considers Taiwan, which split from the mainland at the end of a civil war in 1949, part of its territory awaiting reunification.

China vilifies the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader who fled his homeland in 1959, as a separatist.

Sino-US ties have also been affected by Internet giant Google's threats to pull out of the emerging Asian market over cyberattacks and government web censorship, and a variety of trade and currency issues.

"We have a very broad, deep, complex relationship with China. There are many areas where we have achieved a consensus view. North Korea would be a great example of that," Crowley said.

"There are some areas where we do not yet have a convergent view. Iran might be an example of that," he added, noting that both subjects were on Steinberg's agenda in Beijing.

The six-party talks on ending North Korea's nuclear weapons drive, hosted by China, have faltered since Pyongyang stormed out in April last year, a month before staging a second nuclear test.

Pyongyang says it cannot return until UN sanctions are lifted and it receives a US commitment to discuss a formal peace pact, replacing the armistice which ended the 1950-1953 war on the Korean peninsula.

US special envoy Stephen Bosworth -- who visited China, South Korea and Japan last week in a bid to kickstart the negotiations -- said Saturday he hoped the talks would resume "fairly soon".

On Iran, the United States and China are divided, with Washington pushing for tough new sanctions against Tehran over its disputed nuclear programme, but Beijing insisting more talks are the answer.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said Saturday that he hoped 2010 would not be "an unpeaceful year" for trade and economic relations with the United States.



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