On the 27th local time in New York, CHINA FOREIGN MINISTER WANG YI met with U.S.
strategic and business figures while presiding over a UN Security Council
high‑level meeting. Wang said the China‑U.S. leaders held a historic meeting in
Beijing and engaged in candid, deep, constructive and strategic communications
on major issues affecting China‑U.S. relations and world peace and development,
reaching a series of important understandings. Both sides agreed to position a
"China‑U.S. constructive strategic stability relationship" as the new
orientation of bilateral ties and to work toward a relationship centered on
cooperation, measured competition, controllable differences and prospective
peace, jointly exploring how major powers should properly coexist in the new
era. Wang stressed that "Taiwan independence" and peace and stability in the
Taiwan Strait are mutually incompatible, and said only by upholding the
One‑China principle and the spirit of the three China‑U.S. Joint Communiqués can
peace in the Taiwan Strait be guaranteed and conflict avoided. He said China is
willing to work with the U.S. to implement the important consensus between the
two heads of state and to take concrete actions to bring the "constructive
strategic stability relationship" into effect as soon as possible, and expressed
hope that attendees would make active efforts and help build broader social
consensus.