US voices concerns over Beijing's actions in Taiwan during talks with Chinese official

By ANI | Published: March 16, 2022 04:58 PM2022-03-16T16:58:24+5:302022-03-16T17:05:23+5:30

The United States expressed concerns about China's "provocative" activities across the Taiwan Strait, during talks between US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi which was held on Monday.

US voices concerns over Beijing's actions in Taiwan during talks with Chinese official | US voices concerns over Beijing's actions in Taiwan during talks with Chinese official

US voices concerns over Beijing's actions in Taiwan during talks with Chinese official

The United States expressed concerns about China's "provocative" activities across the Taiwan Strait, during talks between US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi which was held on Monday.

According to a senior Biden administration official, the talks, which were held in Rome on Monday, focused heavily on the war between Russia and Ukraine, and took place over an "intense, seven-hour session," Focus Taiwan reported.

Both sides discussed recent "escalatory actions" taken by North Korea and the need for the US and China to manage their competition so that it does not veer into conflict, according to the official.

As relates to Taiwan, the US official said that Sullivan had "underscored concerns about Beijing' courses and provocative actions across the Taiwan Strait."

He also reiterated Washington's one-China policy "based on the Taiwan Relations Act, Three Communiques and Six Assurances," the official said, referring to the series of commitments that form the basis of US ties with both China and Taiwan, Focus Taiwan reported further.

Under the "one China" policy, the acknowledges the Chinese position that there is but one China and that Taiwan is part of China.

During the talks, Yang also urged the US to recognize "the high sensitivity of the Taiwan question" and to abide by the one-China principle, rather than "going further down the dangerous path" of supporting Taiwan independence, according to China's state-run Xinhua news agency.

On Tuesday, Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said it had received briefings from the US both before and after the meeting between Sullivan and Yang, but declined to comment on what it was told, as per Focus Taiwan.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in app