US President, Joe Biden has warned Chinese President Xi
Jinping that Beijing would face consequences if it provides material support to
Russia amid its invasion of Ukraine, the White House said Friday.
“President Biden detailed our efforts to prevent and then
respond to the invasion, including by imposing costs on Russia,” said a White
House readout of the call published hours after it concluded. “He described the
implications and consequences if China provides material support to Russia as
it conducts brutal attacks against Ukrainian cities and civilians.”
Reportedly, the two leaders spoke for nearly two hours on
Friday morning on a secure video call, which a senior administration official
described as direct, substantive and detailed and largely focused on
Russia’s war in Ukraine.
“We’re concerned that they’re considering directly assisting
Russia with military equipment to use in Ukraine,” Secretary of State Antony
Blinken told reporters on Thursday, the day the White House announced
plans for the phone call.
The senior administration official told reporters that Biden
did not make specific requests of Xi when questioned if Biden asked China to
intervene to stop the Russian assault.
“The president really wasn’t making specific requests of
China,” the official said. “He was laying out his assessment of the situation,
what he thinks makes sense and the implications of certain actions.”
Asked why that was the case later Friday, White House Press
Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters, “Because China has to make a decision
for themselves about where they want to stand.”
Psaki said, the administration was still concerned about the
possibility of China aiding Russia militarily.
“That is something we will be watching and the world will be
watching,” she said.
A Chinese readout of the call said that Xi told Biden that
China does not want to see the situation in Ukraine to come to this. Xi also
affirmed support for peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, according
to the readout, which also indicated he did not condemn Russia’s
actions in Ukraine.
“All sides need to jointly support Russia and Ukraine in
having dialogue and negotiation that will produce results and lead to peace,”
the readout posted by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
“The US and NATO should also have dialogue with Russia to
address the crux of the Ukraine crisis and ease the security concerns of both
Russia and Ukraine.”
Both readouts indicated the two leaders tasked their teams
to follow up on the conversation in the days ahead.
China, which has deepened relations with Russia in recent
years, has tried to portray itself as a neutral party in the Ukraine conflict. The
US officials have urged China to condemn Russia’s behavior while raising
concerns about China’s ties to Russia.
Reports surfaced earlier this week that Russia was seeking
military assistance from China as it continues its invasion.
During a lengthy meeting with China’s top diplomat earlier
this week in Rome, Biden’s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said
that Beijing would face consequences if it helped Russia with the invasion
financially or militarily.
White House officials have also raised concerns about China
amplifying Russian claims that the US is developing biological weapons in
Ukraine, which the US has called disinformation meant to lay the foundation for
a possible Russian chemical attack.
The senior administration official told reporters Friday
that Biden directly expressed concerns to Xi about China echoing Russian
disinformation about bio-weapons labs in Ukraine during the call.
Russia has escalated its attacks on Ukraine since it first
launched its invasion three weeks ago, despite officials and experts saying the
Russian advance has not moved as quickly or as effectively as the Kremlin
had hoped.
Russia has launched missiles targeting hospitals and
civilian areas, prompting Biden and Blinken to call Russian President Vladimir
Putin a “war criminal.”
The US has provided Ukraine with billions of dollars in
humanitarian and security assistance. Biden this week announced a total of US$1
trillion in aid that will be used to supply anti-aircraft defense systems,
anti-tank weapons and other arms to Ukraine.
Separate from talks on Ukraine, Biden reiterated that the US
has not changed its policy on Taiwan and “emphasized that the United States
continues to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo,” according to the
White House readout.
The senior administration official said Xi was the one who
raised the issue of Taiwan.
Taiwan has been a source of some tension between the US and
China, and Russia’s aggression in Ukraine has prompted concerns among some
international watchdogs that China may try to invade or lay claim to the
island.
Biden has previously told Xi the US is committed to the “One
China” policy, under which the US does not recognize Taiwan as a separate state
from China, but had also mistakenly said the US had an obligation to send
troops to Taiwan if it were attacked by China.
Under the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, the US is committed
to providing Taiwan with arms for its defense. The law does not commit the US
to sending troops to Taiwan to defend it.