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'I wouldn't say I'm optimistic' about state of China relations, says US ambassador to Beijing Nicholas Burns

"Hopeful" and "realistic", but not "optimistic".

That was the assessment on Friday from America's ambassador to Beijing about recent efforts by US President Joe Biden's administration to stabilise the US-China relationship.

In a wide-ranging discussion at the Brookings Institution that hit on all the familiar notes about the challenge that China presents for the US, Ambassador Nicholas Burns referred to the country as a "systemic rival", but said that because Washington is both competing and engaging, the relationship "doesn't render into simple analysis".

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Other examples of the complex diplomatic grey zone include disappointment over the State Department's assessment that Beijing has taken Moscow's side in Russia's war against Ukraine, along with confidence that the Kremlin is not yet getting Chinese lethal weapons.

Nicholas Burns, the US ambassador to China, speaking on Friday at the Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington. Photo: via YouTube alt=Nicholas Burns, the US ambassador to China, speaking on Friday at the Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington. Photo: via YouTube>

President Xi Jinping's stated goal of having some 50,000 American students in China - the kind of exchange that Burns said was necessary for the next generation of US policymakers - clashed with the way Beijing "unremittingly" hammers Washington's reputation in its media and blames America for the Russian invasion.

Regarding the agreements that Biden and Xi made during their summit in California last month - to cooperate in fighting fentanyl and resume military-to-military contacts - Burns said: "So far the Chinese have met their commitments on fentanyl and I think will in terms of our military-to-military contacts, but let's see what happens over time."

The problem, he said, is that Chinese government officials tend to shut down communication whenever a bilateral dispute occurs, making the duration of recent progress uncertain.

"So I wouldn't say I'm optimistic," he said. "Careful ... realistic, maybe hopeful if you will, but hopeful is different from being optimistic."

However, Burns was clear about the direction that engagement is going, saying the breakdown in talks on the military and other fronts earlier this year represented the lowest point in bilateral relations since president Richard Nixon began talks with the People's Republic of China in the early 1970s.