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Taiwan question constitutes biggest risk in China-US relations: Chinese FM

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Taiwan question constitutes biggest risk in China-US relations: Chinese FM

2026-04-30 23:39 Last Updated At:05-01 01:17

The Taiwan question concerns China's core interests and constitutes the biggest risk in China-U.S. relations, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Thursday when speaking to U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio over the phone.

Wang, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, noted that the U.S. side should honor its commitments and make the right choices, opening new space for China-U.S. cooperation and doing its part to promote world peace.

Head-of-state diplomacy has always been the "anchor" of China-U.S. relations, Wang said.

Noting that bilateral ties have generally remained stable under the strategic guidance of Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump, Wang said it serves the fundamental interests of both peoples and meets the common expectations of the international community.

Both sides should safeguard the hard-won stability, prepare well for key high-level interaction agendas, expand areas of cooperation, manage differences, explore building a China-U.S. relationship that is strategic, constructive and stable, and achieve mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation.

For his part, Rubio said that the U.S.-China relationship is the most important bilateral relationship in the world, and head-of-state diplomacy is at the core of the relationship.

Both sides should maintain communication and coordination, respect each other, properly handle differences, accumulate achievements for high-level interactions between the United States and China, and seek strategic stability in U.S.-China relations, said Rubio.

The two sides also exchanged views on the situation in the Middle East, among others.

Taiwan question constitutes biggest risk in China-US relations: Chinese FM

Taiwan question constitutes biggest risk in China-US relations: Chinese FM

A Chinese defense spokesman urged vigilance against Japan's recent military and security policy shifts.

Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang, spokesman for China's Ministry of National Defense, made the remarks on Thursday at a regular press briefing.

According to media reports, the Japanese government has officially revised the Three Principles on Transfer of Defense Equipment and Technology and its implementation guidelines, which in principle green-lighted Japan's export of lethal weapons. In addition, it has resumed military ranks used by the Imperial Japanese Army such as Taisa, and passed a bill to set up a National Intelligence Bureau.

"Japan has recently taken dangerous, adventuristic and provocative actions in the military and security fields. Such moves have already turned against its self-proclaimed identity as a peace-loving country and its 'exclusively defense-oriented' principle," said the spokesman.

"Moreover, Japan is trying to resume the military rank system used by the Imperial Japanese Army, and the intelligence apparatus it plans to form is reminiscent of the notorious Tokko. These actions seriously hurt the national feelings of the people in Asian countries," he said.

"Japan is making reckless and unchecked strides on the path of remilitarization. Will it once again bring disasters to East Asia?" Zhang asked.

"All peace-loving people should stay on high alert, resolutely stop Japan's retrogressive moves, and never allow it to undermine peace and bring calamities to the world," added the spokesman.

Defense spokesman urges vigilance against Japan's recent military, security policy shifts

Defense spokesman urges vigilance against Japan's recent military, security policy shifts

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