Biden says US decision to shoot down suspected balloon changed dynamic of
relations after talks wiith President Xi at G20 summit
HIROSHIMA:
The ties between US and China — which were deteriorated after the former
shot down a suspected spy balloon earlier this year — will see an
improvement "very shortly", said President Joe Biden on Sunday.
Biden's
comments came while speaking at a press conference following the G7 summit
in Hiroshima, Japan.
The US president said that Washington's
decision to shoot down a "silly balloon that was carrying two freight cars
worth of spying equipment" changed the dynamic of relations after talks with
Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in November last
year.
A visit to Beijing by Secretary of State Antony Blinken that
had been billed as a chance to improve relations was cancelled over the
incident.
On Sunday, at a press conference following the G7
summit in Hiroshima, Japan, Biden was asked why a planned hotline between
the United States and China was not in operation.
"You're right,
we should have an open hotline. At the Bali conference, that's what
President Xi and I agreed we were going to do and meet on," he said.
"It
[the balloon] got shot down and everything changed in terms of talking to
one another. I think you're going to see that begin to thaw very
shortly."
Biden's administration has also infuriated China by targeting
trade in advanced microchips, citing risks of military use.
The
president defended those actions on Sunday, a day after the Group of Seven
leading economies warned China over its "militarisation activities" in the
region.
"It is building its military, and that's why I've made it
clear that I am not prepared to trade certain items with China," he said.
"We've
now got a commitment from all of our allies that they're not going to do
that either, provide that kind of material.
"But that's not a
hostile act, that's an act that says, 'we're going to make sure that we do
everything we can to maintain the status quo.'"