Beijing/Washington:The desire to seek hegemony or territorial expansion is "simply not in the Chinese DNA", Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Xie Feng told his American counterpart Wendy Sherman on Monday.
Xie made the remarks while meeting with visiting US Deputy Secretary of State Sherman in the northeastern port city of Tianjin to discuss ways to set terms for the "responsible management" of the strained ties between Beijing and Washington.
Xie said that the China-US relationship is now in a stalemate and faces serious difficulties. Fundamentally, it is because some Americans portray China as an imagined enemy", he said.
"It seems as if by making China an imagined enemy", a national sense of purpose would be reignited in the US," he said.
Xie told Sherman that the Chinese believe that one must not do to others what one does not like to be done to himself.
"The desire to seek hegemony or territorial expansion is simply not in the Chinese DNA. And China has never coerced any country. China responds to foreign interference with legitimate and lawful countermeasures.
"The aim is to defend the legitimate rights and interests of the country and uphold international equity and justice. China has never gone to others' doorsteps to provoke trouble. Neither has China ever stretched its arm into the households of others, still less has China ever occupied any inch of other countries' territory," Xie told Sherman.
Xie's statement comes amid growing concerns in the Indo-Pacific region on China'saggressive actions and territorial disputes with neighbouring countries, including India.
In Washington, the US Department of State said Sherman and Chinese State Councilor Wang had a frank and open discussion about a range of issues, demonstrating the importance of maintaining open lines of communication between our two countries.
"They discussed ways to set terms for responsible management of the U.S-China relationship. The Deputy Secretary underscored that the United States welcomes the stiff competition between our countriesand that we intend to continue to strengthen our own competitive handbut that we do not seek conflict with the People's Republic of China (PRC)," the statement said.
Sherman raised concerns in private about a "range of PRC actions that run counter to our values and interests and those of our allies and partners, and that undermine the international rules-based order," it said.