US Secretary of State Antony Blinken hoping to visit China 'in the near future', close adviser says

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is hoping to visit China "in the near future", as Washington looks to "depressurise" its relationship with Beijing, according to one of his top advisers.

The superpower relationship has sunk to its lowest point in decades in recent months. Face-to-face diplomacy was frozen after Blinken cancelled a trip to China in February, following a row over an alleged Chinese spy balloon flying over the United States.

The broad contours of a visit were discussed between China's top diplomat Wang Yi and US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan in Vienna this week, State Department counsellor Derek Chollet told the South China Morning Post in an interview in Stockholm on Saturday morning.

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"We would very much like to get back to where we were in the planning in February, prior to the surveillance balloon flying over the United States, where Secretary Blinken would go to Beijing on behalf of the president to pick up where the two presidents left off in their meeting in Bali late last year," Chollet said.

"They talked about what we're hoping to get out of such a visit and the structure of dialogue we'd like to have with the PRC [People's Republic of China], particularly in the service of figuring out ways we could depressurise the situation."

He also said that while the US has "been willing to have face-to-face contacts", China was "reluctant to do so".

On Monday, before the Sullivan-Wang meeting, Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang said that "the relationship between the two countries has once again hit the cold ice".

Chollet, who advises Blinken on key areas of foreign policy, is attending the European Union's Indo-Pacific Ministerial Forum in Sweden.

Saturday's event comes a day after the EU discussed its own China policy, and debated a paper orchestrated by its foreign policy chief that urged continued engagement with Beijing, even as it raised grave concerns about direction of travel in the world's second largest economy.

The paper also flagged the mounting risks to Europe emanating from the intense US-China rivalry.

"Coordination with the United States will remain essential," it read. "However, the EU should not subscribe to an idea of a zero-sum game whereby there can only be one winner, in a binary contest between the US and China."