Warning of serious consequences if the conflict continued, Chinese President Xi Jinping told an annual meeting of top diplomats and officials of the two countries here today that "China-US confrontation, to the two countries and the world, would definitely be a disaster".
"We should mutually respect and treat each other equally, and respect the other's sovereignty and territorial integrity and respect each other's choice on the path of development."
"This is what makes communication and cooperation even more necessary," he said speaking at the historic guest house where then US President Richard Nixon met Mao Zedong on his groundbreaking visit to China in 1972.
Nixon's visit laid the foundation for hardline Communist China to come out of an ideological morass and its emergence as the world's second largest economy riding on the crest of large inflows of FDI and technology.
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The SED is taking place after a series of tensions between the two countries sparked by China's increasing conflicts with US allies Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines over Beijing's push to assert its claims over the East and South China Seas.
The two sides also had a tense stand off over NSA contractor Edward Snowdon pointing to US cyber espionage of several Chinese companies and counter allegations by Washington accusing China's military of carrying out cyber surveillance on a number of US companies.
"If we are in confrontation it will surely spell disaster for both countries and for the world," he said calling on both the countries, "to break the old pattern of inevitable confrontation".