Politics

Blinken meets with senior Chinese diplomat in Munich amid tensions over suspected spy balloon

Andrea Mitchell and Christina Zhao
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken attends a meeting with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Nusa Dua on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, July 9, 2022.
Stefani Reynolds | AP

Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Saturday met with a senior Chinese diplomat at a conference in Munich, a State Department spokesperson said.

Blinken and Wang Yi, director of the People's Republic of China CCP Central Foreign Affairs office, met on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, which both are attending, the spokesperson said.

Blinken did not respond to questions from reporters later Saturday.

Diplomatic tensions between the U.S. and China have risen since the shooting down of the alleged Chinese spy balloon, which China has insisted was not intended for spying.

The U.S. and China exchanged strong words after the ballon was downed off the coast of South Carolina on Feb. 4, with China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressing in a statement its "strong dissatisfaction and protest over the use of force" by the U.S.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said afterward that the balloon was being used by the People's Republic of China "in an attempt to surveil strategic sites in the continental United States."

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After China condemned the U.S. decision to shoot the balloon out of the sky, President Joe Biden said in an interview with NBC News Thursday that he plans to speak with his Chinese President Xi Jinping but did not say when, adding, "I think the last thing that Xi wants is to fundamentally rip the relationship with the United States and with me."

Earlier Thursday, Biden delivered his first remarks about the Chinese balloon and three unidentified objects flying above North America that were downed by the U.S. military. One was shot down Feb. 10 over Alaska, another was shot down Feb. 11 over Canada, and a third was shot down over Lake Huron on Feb. 12.

"I gave the order to take down these three objects due to hazards to civilian commercial air traffic and because we could not rule out the surveillance risk of sensitive facilities," he said in his remarks from the White House. "Make no mistake, if any object presents a threat to the safety and security of the American people, I will take it down."

Biden said that the U.S. still doesn't know what the three other objects over North America, which were also shot down by the military this week, were. But he suggested that the U.S. intelligence community believes they didn't have nefarious purposes.

"We're not looking for a new Cold War, but I make no apologies," Biden said. "I make no apologies, and we will compete and we will responsibly manage that competition so that it doesn't veer into conflict."

U.S. Northern Command said Friday it recommended an end to the search for debris from two objects shot down in United States airspace this month.

Earlier this month, Blinken postponed a trip to Beijing after the balloon was spotted over the U.S. "We have concluded that the conditions are not right at this moment for Secretary Blinken to travel to China," a senior State Department official said.