Talks expected on Monday would be first since Obama administration and follow visit to Washington by Wang Yi, Chinese foreign minister
China and the United States will reportedly discuss nuclear arms control next week, the first such talks since the Obama administration.
The talks would be led on Monday by Mallory Stewart, a senior state department official, and Sun Xiaobo, the head of the arms control department at China’s foreign ministry, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
On Monday, China’s foreign ministry said the two countries would hold “consultations on arms control and non-proliferation” in the coming days, as well as separate talks on maritime affairs and other issues. It follows a visit to Washington by the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
China and the United States will reportedly discuss nuclear arms control next week, the first such talks since the Obama administration.
On Monday, China’s foreign ministry said the two countries would hold “consultations on arms control and non-proliferation” in the coming days, as well as separate talks on maritime affairs and other issues.
The US state department and China’s embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to requests by Reuters for comment on the timing or format of the talks.
The US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in 2021 that the Chinese and US presidents had agreed to “look to begin to carry forward discussion on strategic stability”, a reference to Washington’s concerns about Beijing’s nuclear weapons buildup.
Since then, US officials have expressed frustration that China showed little interest in discussing steps to reduce nuclear weapons risks.
A flurry of China-US diplomatic engagements in recent months, largely at Washington’s request, has sought to salvage what were rapidly deteriorating ties between the two countries after the US downing in February of a suspected Chinese spy balloon over the United States.
The original article contains 462 words, the summary contains 181 words. Saved 61%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Both are pragmatic countries, overall.
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The US and Soviets managed to negotiate an arms control treaty, I see no reason why China and US cannot either.
Honestly more likely than talks with USSR. China has had a vocal minimalist stance towards nuclear weapons. Mao was of the opinion that anymore than the minimum required for MAD was a waste. Shockingly reasonable opinion for the geezer.
But did they get rid of nukes completely? Nope.
I am reminded of an old relevant quote:
Trust, but verify.
Nobody wants nuclear war. Especially the top economies on the planet.
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Jesus Christ 🤦♂️
The objective isn’t to have no nukes 👏. It’s to reduce current yield, not advance the technology, and reduced profeliration.
The diminishing returns from 70 years ago are harsh you fucking moron.
This place is actually fucking dumber than Reddit.
Why don’t you go fuck yourself you fucking piece of human waste. No need for name calling, you god damn piece of shit. Fucking keyboard warrior. You wouldn’t say this shit to my face. Id stick my foot in your mouth you little fuck. Go eat shit and die.
👌
Did you like nuke the thread cause big mad?