Defense Priorities Defense Priorities
  • Policy Topics
    • US-Israel-Iran
    • Ukraine-Russia
    • Western Hemisphere
    • NATO
    • China
  • Analysis
    • Policy Papers
    • Symposia
    • Q&A
    • Polls
    • Grand Strategy Explained
    • Target Taiwan
  • Programs
    • Grand Strategy Program
    • Military Analysis Program
    • Asia Program
    • Middle East Program
  • Experts
  • Events
  • Media
  • About
    • Mission & Vision
    • People
    • Jobs
    • Contact
  • Donate
Select Page
Home / China / Biden-Xi Meeting A Good Start—But Tangible Progress Remains Elusive
China, Asia, China‑Taiwan, Taiwan

November 14, 2022

Biden-Xi Meeting A Good Start—But Tangible Progress Remains Elusive

By Lyle Goldstein

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
November 14, 2022
Contact: press@defensepriorities.org

WASHINGTON, DC—Today, President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a bilateral summit in Indonesia ahead of the G20 meeting. Defense Priorities Director of Asia Engagement Lyle Goldstein issued the following statement in response:

“This face-to-face meeting between Presidents Biden and Xi is long overdue. It is the most important bilateral relationship in the world and can impact the prospects for peace, global prosperity, and climate change. The meeting seems to have accomplished the minimum: creating the potential for stabilizing the relationship. But that requires robust follow-up and a determination on both sides to break with trends in both countries toward vitriolic rhetoric and escalating tension.

“Competition in some areas is unavoidable and even useful, but the leaders should agree: most issues are not actually zero-sum in nature and militarized rivalry between nuclear powers is dangerous. Indeed, the two readouts of the respective governments about the Bali meeting diverged quite dramatically, including on the Ukraine war and Taiwan. On the former, the U.S. emphasized an agreement that nuclear weapons should not be used, while the Chinese readout didn’t mention nuclear weapons, stating simply that ‘there are no winners.’ On Taiwan, Biden raised objections to China’s ‘increasingly aggressive actions’ against Taiwan. Xi countered by describing Taiwan as China’s internal affair and a ‘core interest,’ explicitly using the term ‘red line’ to suggest China is willing to risk conflict over Taiwan.

“To make tangible progress on these and other difficult issues, the two leaders and their respective teams should strive for an annual summit that involves something more like three days of talks, rather than just three hours.”

Author

Photo of Lyle Goldstein

Lyle
Goldstein

Director, Asia Program

Defense Priorities

More on China

Op-edChina, Asia, North Korea

The world should welcome Xi Jinping’s efforts to improve ties with North Korea

By Lyle Goldstein

June 17, 2026

ExplainerAlliances, Asia, China, Europe and Eurasia, Russia

Assessing the China-Russia quasi-alliance

By Lyle Goldstein

June 16, 2026

Op-edChina‑Taiwan, Asia, China

D-Day’s Warning for Taiwan

By Lyle Goldstein

June 5, 2026

Op-edChina‑Taiwan, Asia, China

Trump Steps Back From the Brink on Taiwan

By Lyle Goldstein

June 2, 2026

Q&AIran, Asia, China, China‑Taiwan, Great power competition

Takeaways from Trump’s China Trip

By Lyle Goldstein

May 26, 2026

Op-edChina, Asia, China‑Taiwan, Iran, US‑Israel‑Iran

Can the Pentagon beat China if it struggles with Iran?

By Lyle Goldstein

May 25, 2026

Events on China

See All Events
virtualGreat power competition, Balance of power, China, Grand strategy, Middle East

U.S.-China competition and the value of Middle East influence

June 10, 2025
virtualChina, Alliances, Balance of power, Diplomacy, Grand strategy, Russia

China-Russia: Cooperation or a no-limits alliance?

April 3, 2025
virtualAsia, Basing and force posture, Burden sharing, China, Grand strategy

Rethinking U.S. strategy in East Asia: do more bases mean more deterrence?

January 24, 2024

Receive expert foreign policy analysis

Join the hub of realism and restraint

Expert updates and analysis to enhance your understanding of vital U.S. national security issues

Defense Priority Mono Logo

Our mission is to inform citizens, thought leaders, and policymakers of the importance of a strong, dynamic military—used more judiciously to protect America’s narrowly defined national interests—and promote a realistic grand strategy prioritizing restraint, diplomacy, and free trade to ensure U.S. security.

  • Experts
  • Papers
  • Symposia
  • Q&A
  • Polls
  • Events
  • Media
  • Donate
  • About
  • Jobs
  • Contact
© 2026 Defense Priorities Foundation. All rights reserved.