Chinese Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan and US
Secretary of State Colin Powell pledged in New York on Jan.
19 to further enhance bilateral economic, trade
and anti-terrorist co-operation.
Tang arrived
in New York earlier in the day for a United Nations Security
Council ministerial meeting on Jan 20 (local time), which is
expected to discuss global counter-terrorism efforts.
Tang sees a positive trend of development of
Sino-US relations and said the two sides should continue to
implement the consensus reached last October at a meeting in
Crawford, Texas, between Chinese President Jiang Zemin and
his US counterpart, George W. Bush.
The two
sides should maintain bilateral contacts at various levels,
continue to strengthen co-ordination on major international
issues, and further improve and develop their relations in
the new year, Tang said.
Powell said Sino-US
relations are developing in a positive direction and the US
side is satisfied with its increasing co-operation with
China on the economy, trade and counter-terrorism.
They also discussed the Taiwan question and
the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula which attracted
world attention after the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
earlier this month.
Tang said the Taiwan
question is one of China's core interests and that handling
the issue in a careful and appropriate way is critical to
the stable development of Sino-US relations.
He expressed the hope that the US side will
stick to the one-China policy, fulfill its commitments to
the three Sino-US joint communiques and honour its pledge
not to support Taiwan "independence.'' He urged
Washington to handle the Taiwan question in a cautious
manner and avoid sending any messages that could encourage
separatist forces in Taiwan.
Powell said the
US side understands the sensitivity of the Taiwan question
and that he is willing to reaffirm the commitments on the
issue made by President Bush during his meeting with
President Jiang last October.
On the nuclear
issue on the Korean Peninsula, Powell said the US side is
seeking a peaceful solution through diplomatic means and the
DPRK should drop its nuclear programme.
Noting
that China is very concerned with the nuclear issue, Tang
reiterated that China stands for a nuclear-free Korean
Peninsula and believes that an early resumption of talks
between parties concerned is key to the resolution of the
issue.