BEIJING: The United States should choose dialogue and consultation with China instead of pursuing "unacceptable" unilateral sanctions against Chinese companies, China's State Councillor and foreign minister Wang Yi said on Friday.
Wang, in a special address to the Asia Society that focused mainly on the state of Sino-US relations, urged the United States to stop "overstretching the notion of national security" and "arbitrary suppression of Chinese companies".
"We need to replace sanctions with dialogue and consultation," he said, adding that unilateral sanctions had become the "biggest destabilising factor to regional and global security".
"China is not a threat to the United States - was not, is not and will not be a threat," Wang said, yet relations were at their lowest ebb since the establishment of full diplomatic ties in 1979.
Wang also railed at attempts by some US politicians to defame China's ruling Communist Party, describing these as "irresponsible" accusations without any evidence.
Likening Sino-US relations to a "giant vessel," Wang said the interests of the whole world were at stake. "I think we all agree the time has come to decide the future course of this vessel," he said, calling for US policy toward China to "return to objectivity and sensibility as early as possible". Beijing has taken note of the four policy priorities of US President-elect Joe Biden, who is set to take office on Jan. 20, Wang added, and believes at least three of them - COVID-19 response, economic recovery and climate change - provide room for cooperation between the two countries.



















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