Joe Biden and Xi Jinping virtual summit set for Monday, White House announces

US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping plan to hold a much-anticipated virtual summit on Monday evening Washington time, the White House announced on Friday.

"Following their September 9 phone call, the two leaders will discuss ways to responsibly manage the competition between the United States and the [People's Republic of China], as well as ways to work together where our interests align," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said. "Throughout, President Biden will make clear US intentions and priorities and be clear and candid about our concerns with the PRC."

Leader-to-leader engagement was a critical component of the "intense diplomacy" that Washington's "intense competition" with Beijing required, Psaki said later on Friday in a briefing.

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But she quashed hopes of any concrete results from the upcoming summit, stressing instead that the engagement was about "setting the terms, in our view, of an effective competition where we're in a position to defend our values".

Jen Psaki, White House press secretary, speaks during a news conference at the White House in Washington on Friday. Photo: CNP via Bloomberg alt=Jen Psaki, White House press secretary, speaks during a news conference at the White House in Washington on Friday. Photo: CNP via Bloomberg

"I wouldn't set the expectation ... that this is intended to have major deliverables or outcomes," Psaki said.

Pressed on whether Biden would raise concerns of China's crackdown on Uygurs and other ethnic minority groups in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, Psaki said the US leader would "not hold back, as he never has, on areas where we have concern".

"We share the concern about the human rights abuses," she said.

Several new points of bilateral tension have emerged since the two leaders last spoke, including the surprise announcement of a new military alliance between the US, Britain and Australia, known as Aukus, which is aimed at countering China's growing military presence in the Asia-Pacific region, and expanding ties between Washington lawmakers and Taiwanese government officials.

The Chinese government has flagged official US contacts with, and military support for, Taiwan as an area over which it will not compromise.