AMN / WEB DESK

US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a lengthy and candid discussion about Taiwan on Thursday as tensions mount between Washington and Beijing, despite Biden’s onetime hope of stabilizing the world’s most important country-to-country relationship.

According to media reports, both the leaders warned each other over Taiwan during a phone call that lasted more than two hours.

President Joe Biden told his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping that the US strongly opposed any unilateral moves to change the island’s status. However, he said that US policy on Taiwan had not changed. The White House said that apart from Taiwan, the two leaders discussed a range of other issues, including climate change and health security. On other hand, Chinese state media reported that President Xi warned Mr Biden against playing with fire over Taiwan. It said that the US should follow the one-China principle.

During Thursday’s phone call, Mr Biden and Mr Xi also discussed arranging a possible face-to-face meeting. Tensions have increased between the two countries over the US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi upcoming Taiwan visit.

Meanwhile, the US State Department said, Ms Pelosi has not announced any travel, but China has warned of serious consequences if she were to proceed with such a visit. Under the one-China policy, Washington does not recognise Taipei diplomatically. But, the US does sell weapons to the democratically self-governed island so that it can defend itself. After the call, Taiwan thanked Biden for his support and said, it would continue to deepen its security partnership with the US, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement yesterday.

According to CNN, Biden is currently weighing whether to lift some Trump-era tariffs on China in a bid to ease inflation, though White House officials said he hadn’t yet made up his mind and suggested ahead of time the topic wouldn’t factor heavily into his conversation with Xi. Instead, it is China’s escalating aggression in the region — including over Taiwan and the South China Sea — at the center of the current tensions. US officials fear without open lines of communication, misunderstandings could spiral into unintended conflict.