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Xi and Obama find common ground on nuclear security, climate change

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US President Barack Obama meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington on March 31, 2016. Photo: Reuters

China and the United States have announced their first joint statement on nuclear security cooperation and a joint effort to consummate an international climate change agreement.

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President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Barack Obama met on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington on Thursday, in a move analysts said was an effort to consolidate common ground while managing differences.

They agreed to work together to foil North Korea’s nuclear ­ambitions by “fully”, “strictly” and “vigilantly” carrying out a UN resolution on sanctions.

A common enemy: China, US pledge joint battle against nuclear terrorism in landmark declaration

“President Xi and I are both committed to the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula,” Obama said.

On nuclear security, they agreed joint efforts to combat nuclear terrorism and established an annual bilateral dialogue.

The announcements came ahead of Xi’s address to the summit on China’s nuclear policies.

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Xi and Obama said military exchanges and cybersecurity had also been on the agenda for their first meeting this year.

But the two sides showed little softening of their stances on disagreements including territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

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