Senior officials from China and the United States held a phone call over the weekend in which they discussed the ongoing war in Ukraine, as well as trade and international security. The call could be an attempt to prepare the way for an anticipated meeting next month of the two nations’ leaders.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi during an Oct. 30 call. Wang was promoted to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) Politburo earlier in the month, making him China’s top-ranking diplomat.
“The Secretary raised Russia’s war against Ukraine and the threats it poses to global security and economic stability.”
While the State Department’s readout said that Blinken and Wang discussed the problems that the war in Ukraine could bring to bear on global security and economic stability, however, the Chinese readout of the phone call only placed mention of Ukraine in the final paragraph.
The “progress of mankind,” Wang said, would rely on “Chinese-style modernization” and adherence to “Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.”
Despite the strong language, however, Wang said that the call was a “positive gesture,” and that Blinken had expressed the United States’ willingness to maintain communication and engage in cooperation with China.
The call is likely to be seen as a testing of the waters between the two powers. President Joe Biden is expected to meet with CCP leader Xi Jinping in November during the G20 summit in Indonesia. Neither side has confirmed the details of the meeting, which would be the pair’s first face-to-face encounter during the Biden presidency. Both sides’ mention of being willing to communicate on some issues could signal that the planning of that meeting is indeed a go.