As China feels the heat of Washington-led "de-risking" efforts amid Western concerns about Beijing's economic coercion and military aggression, a senior Chinese Communist Party official is visiting the US with a mission to encourage a "correct" perception of his country.
"We're here to promote dialogues between the governments, legislators and political parties of the two countries, as we believe communication is the only way of increasing common understanding," Liu Jianchao, who leads the Chinese Communist Party's diplomatic arm, said on Tuesday in New York at an event hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations.
Stressing a "correct" and "good" understanding of China's "strategic intentions", Liu said that as the country becomes more powerful militarily and economically, its aim was to "deliver a better life for all the Chinese people".
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He said a "mutually beneficial cooperation" would be possible between the two global powers if it's understood that China does not have "any hidden agenda" or the goal of "overtaking" the US.
After completing his engagements in New York, including a meeting with United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday, Liu is expected to visit Washington before heading to San Francisco.
Since taking office in June 2022, Liu has held two meetings in Beijing with Nicholas Burns, the US ambassador to China, and visited countries in Asia, Africa and Europe.
Liu, 59, said that there was "no talk" about returning to the confrontational Wolf Warrior diplomacy and that Chinese diplomats were working to forge "warm and cooperative" ties with countries around the world to create a "favourable international environment" for China's "high-quality development".
He said Beijing would "keep its door open" and create a "market-oriented and rules-based" business environment that meets an "international standard", hoping that, in return, Washington would keep its markets open and provide Chinese companies with "a non-discriminatory business environment".
His remarks came after outgoing foreign direct investment in China exceeded inflows in the third quarter of 2023, the first time that has happened since 1998.