Blinken ends latest trip to China with visit to Beijing record store

27 April 2024, 11:04

APTOPIX US China Blinken
APTOPIX US China Blinken. Picture: PA

He bought albums by Taylor Swift and Chinese rocker Dou Wei in a symbolic nod to cross-cultural exchanges.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken concluded his latest visit to China with a stop at a Beijing record store where he bought albums by Taylor Swift and Chinese rocker Dou Wei in a symbolic nod to cross-cultural exchanges he had been promoting for three days.

Music, he said at the Li-Pi shop on his way to the airport late on Friday, “is the best connector, regardless of geography”.

Yet Swift’s Midnights and Dou Wei’s Black Dream could just as easily represent the seemingly intractable divisions in the deeply troubled relationship between the world’s two largest economies that both sides publicly and privately blame on the other.

Mr Blinken and his Chinese hosts, including Chinese President Xi Jinping and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, all referred to these rifts even as they extolled the virtues of keeping communication channels open to manage these differences and avoid misunderstandings and miscalculations.

Mr Blinken went out of his way to champion the importance of US-China exchanges at all levels. In Shanghai, he ate at a famous soup dumpling restaurant, attended a Chinese basketball playoff game and visited American and Chinese students at the New York University branch.

In his official meetings with Chinese leaders in Beijing, he spoke repeatedly of improvements in ties over the past year.

But he also stressed that the US has serious and growing concerns with China’s policies and practices on the local, regional and global stages. And, he said, the US would not back down.

“America will always defend our core interests and values,” he said.

On several occasions, he criticised Chinese overproduction of electric vehicles that threatened to have detrimental effects on US and European automakers and complained that China was not doing enough to stop the production and export of synthetic opioid precursors.

At one point he warned bluntly that if China does not end support for Russia’s defence industrial sector, something the Biden administration says has allowed Russia to step up its attacks on Ukraine and threaten European security, the US would act to stop it.

“I made clear that if China does not address this problem, we will,” Mr Blinken told reporters after meeting with Mr Xi.

Chinese officials were similarly direct, saying that while relations have generally improved since a low point last year over the shootdown of a Chinese surveillance balloon, they remained fraught.

“The two countries should help each other succeed rather than hurt each other, seek common ground and reserve differences rather than engage in vicious competition, and honour words with actions rather than say one thing but do the opposite,” Mr Xi told Mr Blinken.

US China Blinken
Antony Blinken talks to Yuxuan Zhou during a visit to Li-Pi record store in Beijing (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

Mr Wang, the foreign minister, said China is fed up with what it considers to be US meddling in human rights, Taiwan and the South China Sea and efforts to restrict its trade and relations with other countries.

“Negative factors in the relationship are still increasing and building and the relationship is facing all kinds of disruptions,” he said.

He urged the US “not to step on China’s red lines on China’s sovereignty, security, and development interests”.

Or, as Yang Tao, the director general of North American and Oceania affairs at the Foreign Ministry, put it, according to the official Xinhua News Agency: “If the United States always regards China as its main rival, China-US relations will continuously face troubles and many problems.”

Still, Mr Blinken pressed engagement on all levels. He announced a new agreement to hold talks with China on the threats posed by artificial intelligence but lamented a dearth of American students studying in China – fewer than 900 now, compared with more than 290,000 Chinese in the US. He said both sides wanted to increase that number.

“We have an interest in this, because if our future leaders – whether it’s in government, whether it’s in business, civil society, climate, tech, and other fields – if they’re going to be able to collaborate, if they want to be able to solve big problems, if they’re going to be able to work through our differences, they’ll need to know and understand each other’s language, culture, history,” he said.

“What I told my PRC counterparts on this visit is if they want to attract more Americans here to China, particularly students, the best way to do that is to create the conditions that allow learning to flourish anywhere – a free and open discussion of ideas, access to a wide range of information, ease of travel, confidence in the safety, security and privacy of the participants,” Mr Blinken said.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Floating pier

First deliveries of aid for Gaza Strip move across newly built floating pier

World Court Israel Palestinians

Israel tells UN top court South Africa making a ‘mockery’ of charge of genocide

France Shooting

French police shoot dead armed man suspected of planning synagogue attack

59th ACM Awards – Show

Lainey Wilson takes top honour at 2024 Academy of Country Music Awards

APTOPIX Severe Weather Texas

Severe storms kill at least four people in Houston

EU flag in front of Berlaymont building facade

Eight EU members say Syria should be reassessed for voluntary refugee returns

North Korea

North Korea test-fires ballistic missiles day after US and South Korea jet drill

Russia Ukraine War

Massive Ukrainian drone attack on Crimea cuts power in Sevastopol

Rouen's synagogue

Police shoot dead armed man trying to 'burn synagogue' in France

Captain Adrian Coghill has been expelled from Russia

Russia expels British diplomat, after UK orders Moscow's military attache to leave 'for spying'

World Court Israel Palestinians

Israel to respond to genocide charges at UN’s top court

North Korea Russia

Kim Jong Un’s sister denies North Korea has supplied weapons to Russia

Dublin ‘portal’ to New York turned off after Irish pranksters hold aloft images of burning Twin Towers

'Portal' live-stream connecting Dublin and New York to reopen within days after closing due to 'inappropriate behaviour'

Michael Cohen on his way to court

Cohen pressed on his crimes and lies as defence attacks key Trump trial witness

Soldiers assigned to the 7th Transportation Brigade (Expeditionary) and sailors attached to the MV Roy P Benavidez assemble the Roll-On, Roll-Off Distribution Facility (RRDF), or floating pier, off th

US military says Gaza Strip pier project complete with aid to flow soon

A Putin ally has warned of global war.

Russia issues fresh World War Three threat to West as Putin ally warns of 'global catastrophe'