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America and China's top diplomats stressed the need to manage differences and cooperate against global threats including Islamic State and Ebola, as they sought to warm the mood between their countries ahead of a summit next month. "There are many areas that the United States and China are co-operating on, even as we have some differences that we try to manage effectively," US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters in Boston on Saturday before a second day of talks with China's State Councillor Yang Jiechi.
He listed areas of co-operation ranging from Afghanistan, the North Korea nuclear situation, Iran, climate change and counter terrorism, including the effort against Islamic State. Yang said the aim of his visit was prepare the way for a meeting between China's President Xi Jinping and US President Barack Obama in Beijing on November 12 after a meeting of the Asia-Pacific Co-operation forum (Apec).
"We believe that we should continue to work together to deepen our mutual trust and to put our efforts into major areas of co-operation, while on the basis of mutual respect we can properly handle any kind of difference between us," Yang said. Shared concern about Islamic State offers a rare convergence of security interests for Beijing and Washington, and a break from their more typical enmity on sensitive geopolitical issues, notably in the South China Sea and matters such as cyber spying.
Kerry hosted a dinner for Yang at his Boston townhouse on Friday and a senior State Department official said they spoke "frankly" about ways to manage differences while improving co-operation on global and regional issues. On Monday, Kerry is to attend the inauguration of Indonesia's newly elected president Joko Widodo in Jakarta, where he is expected to hold bilateral meetings with regional counterparts who share concerns about China's territorial assertiveness in East Asia. Yang said it was important to cooperate in the Asia-Pacific.
"The Asia-Pacific region is a very important region," he told reporters. "We need to work together to build up even more co-operation between China and the United States in the area because this is the area that has experienced robust economic development." Analysts familiar with US thinking expect the Boston talks to include discussion of intelligence co-operation, including tracking militant movements and financing. China has significant energy interests in Iraq and is also troubled by what it says are domestic Islamist militants. Its state media has reported that militants from the western region of Xinjiang, which abuts Pakistan and Afghanistan, have sought training from Islamic State fighters for attacks at home. Beijing has responded cautiously, though, to a call by US President Barack Obama for a broad coalition to root out Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, saying the world should fight terror but that the sovereignty of countries must be respected.

Copyright Reuters, 2014

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