Xi Jinping to attend US nuclear security summit amid tensions over North Korea’s claim to have tested hydrogen bomb
President Xi Jinping will attend a nuclear security summit in Washington next week, less than three months after an increasingly unpredictable North Korea claimed to have tested a nuclear weapon.
The president will attend the fourth bi-annual nuclear security summit starting on March 31, the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced on Wednesday.
It will be his second Nuclear Security Summit since coming to power and his second trip to the United States over the past 12 months.
China ‘must prepare for war over North Korea’s rocket launch and nuclear tests’
The summit comes after North Korea claimed in January it had tested a hydrogen bomb, in an underground explosion which US observers measured at magnitude 5.1.
China has been under pressure to impose stricter punishments on North Korea for its nuclear test and missile launches. It has agreed to a new round of United Nations sanctions, but critics are sceptical of its willingness to faithfully carry them out.
University of Hong Kong US-China relations expert Professor Xu Guoqi said North Korea had become a major headache for the Chinese government.
“If North Korea has already become a nuclear power that gives the United States a strong excuse to basically do something in South Korea or to strengthen Japan,” he said.