Xi Jinping stresses China’s DPRK concerns in talk with Donald Trump

World Today

FILE – In this April 7, 2017 file photo, President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping walk together after their meetings at Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

Beijing is willing to work with Washington on ending the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s nuclear weapons program but wants a peaceful solution to the escalating conflict, Chinese President Xi Jinping told President Donald Trump in a phone call Wednesday.

China’s calls for calm come as tensions have risen with the dispatch of a U.S. aircraft carrier to the area and the deployment of thousands of U.S. and South Korean troops, tanks and other weaponry for their biggest-ever joint military exercises.

During their phone call, Xi told Trump that China is willing to continue working with the U.S. on denuclearization, according to a brief description of the call released by the Chinese foreign ministry.

“China insists on realizing the denuclearization of the peninsula, insists on maintaining peace and stability on the peninsula, and advocates resolving the problem through peaceful means,” Xi was quoted as saying.

The two leaders spoke Tuesday night Washington time after Trump said an “armada” of vessels including the USS Carl Vinson carrier was steaming to waters off the Korean Peninsula in a show of force.

The presidents also discussed the situation in Syria.

Xi said that any use of chemical weapons is unacceptable and that the path of political settlement should be followed. He said he hoped the U.N. Security Council will speak with one voice on the issue.

Both presidents said their meeting in Florida last week was a success.

Xi said they held in-depth discussions and reached important consensus on bilateral relations in the new era and on major global and regional issues. Trump said it was very important for the two presidents to maintain close communication.

Trump also said he was looking forward to his state visit to China this year.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Wednesday at a regular briefing in Beijing that it was a “good thing” that the two leaders were in touch again days after meeting in Florida.

Regarding the U.S. navy strike force’s arrival in the western Pacific, Lu said: “We hope all parties will refrain from irresponsible actions that would be very dangerous at the moment.”

DPRK state media has warned of a nuclear attack on the United States in retaliation for any signs of aggression, a threat that has been made numerous times before.

Earlier Tuesday, Trump suggested the U.S. could “solve” the DPRK issue unilaterally.

In another tweet, he sought to persuade Xi to put pressure on North Korea in exchange for a good trade deal with the U.S.

Trump and other U.S. officials have repeatedly called on China to leverage its status as the DPRK’s biggest economic partner and source of food and fuel aid to force Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

China says it is in full compliance with sanctions enacted under U.N. Security Council resolutions. In February, China suspended imports of coal from the DPRK — a key source of foreign currency for Kim Jong Un’s hard-line Communist regime.

The U.S. and other foreign governments have long overestimated China’s ability to affect Pyongyang’s behavior, said Ruan Zongze, a U.S. relations expert at the China Institute of International Studies, a think tank run by the foreign ministry.

“There’s a view that China possesses the key to solving the peninsula problem, or that China has the faucet and that all China has to do is shut it off and the peninsula issue is solved,” Ruan said.

“In fact, I think the outside exaggerates the sort of role China can play. China isn’t really as influential as all that,” he said.

Beijing’s insistence on a peaceful approach to resolving the issue is rooted in its belief that any attempt to denuclearize the North by force would bring cataclysmic results upon all sides, including China, Ruan said.

“When it comes to the issue of the Korean Peninsula, violence is not an option,” he said.

Beijing says it will not countenance measures that could bring about a collapse of the regime that could release a flood of refugees across its border, destabilize northeast Asia and result in a U.S.-friendly government taking power in Pyongyang.

Story by the Associated Press and Xinhua.