Blog Search

Kissinger Embarks on Beijing

Chinese President Xi Jinping attended a meeting at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing with the United States’ former top diplomat, Henry Kissinger.


“Chinese President Xi Jinping has welcomed former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger to Beijing, saying their two countries are currently at a critical juncture for the future of their relations. The veteran American diplomat, who recently turned 100, had earlier met with Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu.

Addressing his guest on Thursday, Xi said that ‘once again, China and the U.S. are at a crossroads of where to go from here, and once again, both sides need to make a choice’.

Xi added that the ‘Chinese people never forget their old friends, and Sino-U.S. relations will always be linked with the name of Henry Kissinger’. Beijing was willing to explore ways of peaceful coexistence between the two global powers, the Chinese head of state said.

Kissinger played a key role in the talks that put an end to the Vietnam War, as well as the normalization of relations between Washington and Beijing with an eye to pitting China against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

During his meeting with Defense Minister Li Shangfu on Tuesday, Kissinger urged both nations to reverse their current confrontational course.

Relations between the U.S. and China have been steadily deteriorating over the past few years, especially over the issues of Taiwan and trade.

Washington has sent several top-ranking officials to Beijing recently, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in an apparent bid to defuse the situation.

At the alliance’s summit in Vilnius last week, NATO accused China of pursuing ‘coercive policies’ that threatened the U.S.-led bloc’s interests. Beijing has denounced the claim as ‘slander’ and a ‘smear’, accusing NATO of being trapped in a Cold War mentality”. -RT

At over a hundred years old, Kissinger holds a pivotal role in history for his instrumental part as the former secretary of state to then-U.S. President Richard Nixon in facilitating China’s emergence from diplomatic isolation.

And, as an explicit consequence of the centurion’s diplomatic contributions to China’s rise in becoming a manufacturing powerhouse and the world’s second-largest economy, Beijing has been able to foster the growth of a Sino-aligned international coalition much too powerful for the U.S.-led NATO alliance to confront directly.