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Al Jazeera
Politics

China’s Xi welcomes ‘old friend’ Henry Kissinger in Beijing

China's President Xi Jinping speaks with former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger during a meeting in Beijing [China Out/via AFP]

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has welcomed his “old friend”, former United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, to Beijing.

The visit on Thursday came as the US and China have increasingly sought to improve their tanking relationship. The 100-year-old Kissinger was instrumental in negotiating for the two countries to normalise ties in the 1970s during the Cold War.

“Chinese people value friendship, and we will never forget our old friend and your historic contribution to promoting the development of China-US relations and enhancing the friendship between the Chinese and American peoples,” President Xi told Kissinger on Thursday, according to state media.

“This not only benefitted the two countries, but also changed the world,” Xi continued. “China and the United States are once more at a crossroads, and both sides must once again make a choice.”

While controversial in the US, Kissinger remains a highly esteemed figure in China. That regard was on full display during the trip and stood in contrast to the reception US Climate Envoy John Kerry received during his visit, which concluded on Wednesday.

Kerry and US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who visited China at the beginning of July, did not meet with Xi while in Beijing. However, current US Secretary of State Antony Blinken did meet the Chinese leader when he visited Beijing in June.

On Tuesday, Kissinger also held talks with Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu. Li is currently barred from visiting the US over arms sales he oversaw with Russia.

In a release, China’s defence ministry said Li praised the role Kissinger played in opening up US-China ties. He added that bilateral relations had recently hit a low point because of “some people on the American side who are not willing to meet China halfway”.

Beijing had previously declined an invitation for Li to meet with US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on the sidelines of a summit in Singapore this past June. On Thursday, White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said it was “unfortunate” that a “private citizen” like Kissinger was able to meet with Li, but not Austin.

The US and China have seen an array of issues in recent years heighten tensions between the two countries.

Those points of contention include charged rhetoric over Taiwan, the self-governing island Beijing claims as its own, as well as China’s military actions in the East China Sea and South China Sea.

Washington has also expressed concern about Beijing’s increasing “assertiveness” in the Indo-Pacific region, and the two countries have engaged in economic disputes over supply chains and efforts to limit access to critical technologies.

Tensions further flared when then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in August 2022, making her the highest-ranking US official to visit the island in 25 years. China responded to her trip by suspending several lines of dialogue and conducting military exercises near Taiwan.

Relations strained yet again this year, when a diplomatic row erupted over what Washington described as a Chinese surveillance balloon drifting over the US. The friction over the balloon — which was ultimately shot down — caused Blinken to delay a planned trip to Beijing, though China has denied the aircraft was used for spying.

Amid the latest efforts to improve relations, the US and China have both hailed moderate success, while stressing the need to keep communication open.

Kissinger’s visit, conducted in a personal capacity, could offer the opportunity for a more frank discussion about what both sides want from their relations.

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, US Department of State spokesperson Matthew Miller said officials were aware of Kissinger’s visit, which he described as being “under his own volition, not acting on behalf” of the US.

He added he would not “be surprised if at some point he briefs officials here on his conversations, as he had regularly done in the past”.

In 1971, Kissinger secretly flew to Beijing, kicking off a warming of relations with China’s communist government. The US’s overtures to the then-isolated country contributed to China’s eventual rise as a manufacturing powerhouse and the world’s second-largest economy.

Kissinger was later co-awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiations that led to a ceasefire in the Vietnam War, which ended in 1975.

Still, some critics have considered him a war criminal for his role in secret bombing campaigns in Cambodia and Laos, as well as for supporting coups in Chile and Argentina and turning a blind eye to mass atrocities committed by Pakistan during Bangladesh’s 1971 war of independence.

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