Chinese State Councilor Dai Bingguo holds talks with two senior White House advisers, National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers and Deputy National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, in Beijing, capital of China, on Sept. 7, 2010. (Xinhua/Li Tao)
As U.S. Officials Begin Visit To Beijing, Relations Are 'Sound,' China Says -- Washington Post
BEIJING - At a time of tension in U.S.-China relations, a three-day visit by senior U.S. officials to Beijing began Monday with signs that Chinese leaders want to smooth over some key frictions.
"Sound" and "stable" was how a top Communist Party official described the two countries' relationship while receiving the U.S. delegation, which included National Economic Council Director Lawrence H. Summers and deputy national security adviser Thomas Donilon.
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More News On U.S. - China Relations
Signs U.S.-China military exchanges may resume -- Washington Post
China and US likely to resume military contacts -- Financial Times
U.S., China Avoid Touchy Issues in Talks -- Wall Street Journal
US, China Seek to Mend Fences During Security, Finance Talks -- Voice of America
China-US ties improving, Hu tells White House team -- Reuters
China Strikes Positive Note in Talks With U.S. -- Wall Street Journal
US, China hail warmer relationship -- AFP
China stresses importance of good ties with United States -- AFP
China: U.S. relations 'sound' -- Washington Post
China, US meet amid tensions over trade, military -- AP
Trade, Debt, Territorial Issues Dominate US-China Talks -- Voice of America
China Says ‘External Pressure’ Won’t Change Currency Policy -- Bloomberg
China rejects currency pressure amid US visit -- AP
Bumpy Months Ahead for U.S. and China -- Wall Street Journal
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