China’s Xi Lauds ‘New Positioning’ in Ties With US

By Liz Lee, Yukun Zhang ⁠and ⁠Xiuhao Chen

BEIJING, May ⁠14 (Reuters) – China’s President Xi Jinping hailed ​on Thursday a “new positioning” of ties with the ‌United States that envisages ‌cooperation with measured competition, following his ⁠summit with ⁠President Donald Trump.

Xi said both leaders agreed that ​building a constructive, strategically stable relationship would guide ties in the next three years and beyond, ​according to a Chinese foreign ministry statement.

Xi described ⁠such ties ⁠as based primarily ⁠on ​cooperation but with measured competition for “a normal stability in ​which differences ⁠are controllable, and a lasting stability in which peace can be expected”, the ministry added.

He called for both countries to widen exchanges ⁠and cooperation in trade, health, agriculture, tourism, people-to-people exchanges, and ⁠law enforcement, it said.

Even as Xi talked up cooperation, he stressed “utmost caution” by the United States in handling the issue of Taiwan, the democratically governed island claimed by China, although Taipei rejects the contention.

“If handled poorly, the two countries could collide ⁠or even enter into conflict, pushing the entire China-U.S. relationship into an extremely dangerous situation,” the Chinese leader said.

(Reporting by Liz Lee ​and Beijing newsroom; Editing by Christian ​Schmollinger and Clarence Fernandez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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