UK ‘clear-eyed’ about disagreements with China, Cleverly says during Beijing trip
London wants a pragmatic relationship with China but will remain “clear-eyed” about areas of disagreement, British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said in Beijing on Wednesday on a visit criticized by some in the governing Conservative Party. Cleverly is the first senior British minister in five years to visit China, a trip that he hopes will reset ties between the two countries after years of tension over security, investment and human rights concerns. The foreign secretary has argued it would be a mistake to isolate the world’s second-largest economy or tackle climate change without its input, but some Conservative lawmakers say the trip looks like an expression of British weakness. For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app. “We are clear-eyed about the areas where we have fundamental disagreements with China and we raise those issues when we meet,” he told broadcasters. “But I think it’s important to also recognize that we have to have a pragmatic, sensible working relationship with China because of the issues that affect us all around the globe.” China Vice President Han Zheng told Cleverly at their meeting that he hoped the two countries could make new advances in their relations. The British government is under pressure from several lawmakers, including the former Prime Minister Liz Truss, who want London to toughen its policy on China and to declare the country a threat to British national security. One Conservative, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it was unclear what the “benefit” of the trip was. “We should be robust toward China, but this looks the opposite,” the lawmaker said. Head of parliament’s foreign affairs committee, Conservative Alicia Kearns, said she feared ministers had no coherent strategy on Beijing after her committee released a report critical of the government’s China policy. She said the strategy was buried, “kept hidden even from senior ministers across government,” she said. “How can those implementing policy – and making laws – do so without an understanding of the overall strategy?” Cleverly said any attempt to distil the relationship down to a single word or a sound bite was fundamentally flawed. “It is an important country, it’s a large country, an influential country, and a complicated country, and therefore our relationship with China will necessarily be just as complicated and sophisticated,” he said. Read more: