Biden National Security Adviser Secretly Meets With China's Top Diplomat in Malta
Biden National Security Adviser Secretly Meets With China's Top Diplomat in Malta - The meeting came as questions swirl around the durability of Xi Jinping's political and military leadership after a second Chinese minister disappears.

Biden National Security Adviser Secretly Meets With China's Top Diplomat in Malta
The meeting came as questions swirl around the durability of Xi Jinping's political and military leadership after a second Chinese minister disappears.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan held an unscheduled meeting with China's top diplomat Wang Yi in Malta during the weekend, the White House said.
The meeting was part of the Biden administration's efforts to reopen the high-level communication lines with China's communist regime and manage bilateral ties that have deteriorated over a slew of issues, from trade to Taiwan.
In the past three months, President Joe Biden has dispatched four cabinet-level officials to Beijing: Secretary of State Antony Blinken; Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen; John Kerry, President Joe Biden's climate envoy; and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.
The White House called the recent meeting "candid, substantive, and constructive," while China's foreign ministry described the meeting as "frank, substantive, and constructive."
Mr. Sullivan "noted the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait" during the meeting, according to the White House statement.
Durability
The exchange came ahead of next week's U.N. General Assembly gathering in New York. While the U.S. State Department had expressed hopes that Mr. Blinken could sit down with Mr. Wang on the sidelines of the meeting or before the end of this year, China's foreign ministry on Friday said they're sending Vice Premier Han Zheng, instead. Mr. Wang attended the high-level engagement last year.
ahead of a meeting at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on June 18, 2023.
(Leah Millis/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
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The meeting also came as the apparent instability of Chinese leader Xi Jinping's cabinet is under scrutiny.
Just over a week later, Mr. Qin vanished from the public eye.
On July 25, after a month-long, unexplained disappearance, Mr. Qin lost his foreign minister's job. No reason was provided in the brief official statement issued by state media.
Shortly after his dismissal, the foreign ministry erased nearly all of Mr. Qin's profile and public engagements from its website. While some of the mentions reappeared on the ministry's official page later, Mr. Qin, who was widely seen as Mr. Xi's protégé, has not made any public appearances since June.
As of Sunday, Gen. Li hasn't been heard from publicly for 19 days. His last public appearance was on Aug. 29, when he addressed a security forum and held talks with visiting defense ministers from Ghana, Zambia, and several other African countries.
Chinese authorities remain tight-lipped on the situation.
During a press call on Sunday, a senior administration official told reporters that the two missing Chinese ministers "didn't come up" during the two days of exchange.
When asked about the defense minister at the briefing on Sept. 11, foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning replied, "I'm not aware of the situation you mentioned."
The senior administration official said Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Wang spent about 12 hours together over the past two days.
It's expected that these talks could help lay the groundwork for a meeting between President Biden and Mr. Xi during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in San Francisco in November.
Mr. Sullivan last met with his counterpart in May 2023 in Vietnam, according to the senior administration official. He underscored during the Malta meeting that the United States and China are in competition and that the United States does not seek confrontation, the official told reporters.
The senior administration official also said there was no fresh information about the possibility of a Biden–Xi meeting in November at the APEC summit. But she stressed that it was a "constructive" discussion, with participants from both sides realizing the value of maintaining open lines of communication.