Premier Li Keqiang gives a press conference at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 15, 2017. [Photo/Xinhua]
BEIJING — Premier Li Keqiang said on March 15 that China and the United States are in close communication on a meeting between President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Donald Trump.
Addressing a press conference after the conclusion of the annual session of China’s top legislature, Premier Li said diplomatic authorities from the two countries are communicating on a face-to-face meeting between the two leaders.
The China-US relationship is crucial not just to the two countries themselves, but also to regional and global peace, security, and stability, he said.
“Hence we must work together to continuously take it forward,” he said.
Premier Li noted that China-US ties have been going forward despite various twists and turns, but said he feels optimistic about future China-US relations, because “after several decades of growth of bilateral relations, the two countries now share a wide range of common interests.”
Though there are still differences between China and the United States over issues such as jobs, the exchange rate, and security, “it is important for both countries to uphold strategic interests, sit down to talk to each other, so as to enhance mutual understanding and trust,” he said.
For those differences that cannot be resolved for the time being and any time soon, they can be shelved and the two countries can continue to focus on expanding their common interests, he said.
“(And) as we do so, the percentage of differences in overall China-US relations will continuously come down,” Premier Li said.
He went on to say that China does not want to see a trade war between the world’s biggest and second biggest economies.
“That would not make our trade fairer and it hurts us both,” he said.
If there were a trade war, it would be foreign-funded companies, particularly US firms, that would first bear the brunt, Premier Li said, citing an article written by an authoritative international thinktank.