WASHINGTON, June 13 (Reuters) – US national security adviser Jake Sullivan has raised concerns with China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi over Beijing’s veto at the United Nations of a US-led push to impose more sanctions on North Korea, a senior US official said.
Washington has warned that North Korea’s first nuclear test since 2017 could happen at “any time”. China says it does not want to see that happen, which is partly why in May it vetoed a bid to impose new UN sanctions on Pyongyang over renewed ballistic missiles launches.
A senior US administration official told reporters during a briefing on a 4-1/2-hour meeting between Sullivan and Yang in Luxembourg on Monday that the United States believed Beijing and Washington could cooperate on the North Korea issue.
“Jake raised concerns, in particular, about the veto, which comes following a significant series of ballistic missile launches in violation of previous UN Security Council resolutions and the preparations … for potential nuclear tests,” the official said.
“Each side laid out their positions and the way we see the situation, and certainly Jake made very clear that we believe this is an area where the United States and China should be able to work together,” the official said.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Monday that Washington will maintain pressure on North Korea until Pyongyang changes course, following a meeting with his South Korean counterpart who urged China to persuade the North not to resume nuclear testing.
The Sullivan-Yang meeting follows a late May call between the two officials after which Sullivan said it was possible President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping could speak soon, though no such engagement has been announced.
The official said the United States and China were maintaining high-level communication, including a meeting between US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Chinese counterpart at a forum in Singapore on Friday.
“I’d expect to see additional potential meetings in the months ahead, but nothing specific planned at this time, the US official said when asked if a Xi-Biden meeting or call had been discussed.
The White House said in an earlier statement on the Luxembourg meeting that the United States sought to keep lines of communication open with Beijing to manage bilateral competition.
Relations between China and the United States are at their lowest point in decades, as the two countries spar over difference on Chinese-claimed Taiwan, China’s human rights record, and what Washington says is Beijing’s growing economic and military coercion around the world.
(Reporting by Michael Martina, Eric Beech, Andrea Shalal and Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Susan Heavey and Sandra Maler)
This article originally appeared on reuters.com