Wang and Tillerson met yesterday at a G20 gathering of foreign ministers -- the highest-level Sino-US encounter since President Donald Trump was elected.
Trump had infuriated Beijing by calling into question Washington's long-standing "One China" policy, but later reaffirmed it in a conciliatory phone call to Chinese President Xi Jinping last week.
Wang told Tillerson this consensus on the issue "created the necessary pre-conditions for the two nations to engage in strategic cooperation on bilateral, regional, and global issues," said a Chinese foreign ministry statement issued late yesterday.
"China is ready to work with the US side to implement the consensus reached between President Xi and President Trump, and move the bilateral relationship forward in the direction that features no conflict, no confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation."
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Wang added that the two sides should increase communication and cooperation "to ensure greater development of bilateral relations during Trump's presidency."
The "One China" policy is an acknowledgement that Taiwan is not separate from mainland China.
Wang's attendance at the G20 foreign ministers' meeting seemed in doubt in the fallout, but after Trump's call with Xi, it was announced that the trip would go ahead.
Taiwan has been ruled separately since Mao Zedong's communists ousted China's Nationalists who fled to the island in 1949.
On the campaign trail, Trump regularly attacked China for stealing American jobs and running a massive, unfair trade surplus that he vowed to reverse.
The US State Department said the two ministers discussed the need for a "level playing field for trade and investment."
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