US and China in 'frequent, clear and candid' dialogue on Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen's visit, American envoy says

American officials' "frequent, clear and candid" dialogues with counterparts in Beijing on Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen's visit should help temper mainland China's response, a senior State Department diplomat said on Thursday.

Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, also expected a "smooth and successful" transit of the United States by the island's leader.

He made the comment after Tsai landed in New York on Wednesday local time. She is expected to stay two nights before heading to Guatemala on Saturday as part of a 10-day trip that will also include Belize, another Central American ally.

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On her way back to Taiwan, Tsai is due to stop over in Los Angeles for two nights starting on April 4, where she is expected to meet US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

Against a backdrop of high tensions between the US and China, "frequent communications" are taking place between Washington and Beijing regarding Tsai's visit and a range of other issues, Kritenbrink told a press conference on Thursday.

"We've had clear and candid exchanges as we often do on issues related to the Taiwan Strait," he said.

"I think both sides understand one another's position well," he told reporters, noting that he had spoken frequently about Tsai's stopover with his Chinese counterparts.

Tsai's current travel was consistent with long-standing US practice, he reiterated. "It is a routine, private and unofficial transit, and there is no reason for [China] or anyone else to overreact to it," he said multiple times during his briefing.

"I am confident that President Tsai is going to have a smooth and successful transit of the United States," Kritenbrink added.

The senior American diplomat anticipated that Tsai would have an opportunity to engage with various members of the US Congress, similar to her schedule during previous visits.

"The US approach to the PRC, the US approach to the cross-strait situation and the US approach to our very important and robust but unofficial partnership with Taiwan, all of those policies remain unchanged," Kritenbrink said, alluding to China by the initials of its official name.

However, Qian Jin, Beijing's deputy consul general in New York, said any suggestion that Tsai should receive credit for a supposedly low-key approach misses the point, describing past US transits by the Taiwanese leader as "mistakes".