Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 10, 2014
Naypyidaw. The United States on Sunday pressed its case for a freeze on hostile acts in waters contested by China and its Southeast Asian neighbors, but said it did not want to “confront” Beijing over its strategy in the region.
Naypyidaw. The United States on Sunday pressed its case for a freeze on hostile acts in waters contested by China and its Southeast Asian neighbors, but said it did not want to “confront” Beijing over its strategy in the region.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry is pushing for an agreement to end all actions
that risk further inflaming regional relations, following several tense
encounters in the disputed South China Sea this year.
Washington’s
top diplomat is touring the region despite a slew of major international crises
in other parts of the world as the US looks to reinvigorate alliances in the
Asia-Pacific as part of President Barack Obama’s “pivot” east.
Sea
disputes are likely to dominate security talks at the Asean Regional Forum in
Myanmar’s capital Naypyidaw on Sunday afternoon.
The meet
brings together Southeast Asian foreign ministers and key partners, including
the US, Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the European Union.
A senior US
administration official said concern among its Southeast Asian allies about
“Chinese behavior was at an all time high”.
But the
official insisted there would not be a “showdown” between the two world
superpowers.
“We don’t
want to confront China. But we have a series of interests and principles that
drive our approach in the region where they diverge with China,” the official
said.
Kerry on
Saturday formally put forward Washington’s proposal to cool maritime tensions
based on claimant states agreeing to step back from actions that could
“complicate or escalate disputes”.
The US
waded in to the South China Sea row following a series of maritime incidents
between China and rival claimants, including Beijing’s positioning of an oil
rig in waters also claimed by Vietnam which sparked deadly riots in the
Southeast Asian nation.
‘Galvanising’
role
China
claims sovereignty over almost the entire sea, which lies on key shipping
routes and is believed to be rich in mineral and oil deposits.
But its
claims overlap with Asean states Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam,
as well as Taiwan.
US
officials hailed American influence in Asean talks that began Friday, saying it
had helped the bloc issue a united statement on the sea issue, which has
previously seen friction between some member states with maritime claims and
supporters of China.
“We think
we have been successful in galvanizing and serving as a catalyst,” said a State
Department official.
Asean said
it was “seriously concerned” over the maritime disputes, in a statement by
foreign ministers Sunday, that had been delayed as members wrangled over the
language of the South China Sea section.
“We urged
all parties concerned to exercise self-restraint and avoid actions which would
complicate the situation and undermine peace, stability, and security,” it
said.
‘Guns and
butter’
Earlier
Sunday Kerry also seized the chance to reassure his Japanese and South Korean
counterparts over the US’ commitment on a range of other security concerns,
particularly over nuclear-armed North Korea.
“We have a
great deal to talk about with respect to the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic
of Korea] and the security issues in the region,” Kerry said.
The US has
called on Pyongyang to release two American citizens facing trial in North
Korea and urged its nationals to avoid travel to the reclusive state.
Pyongyang
has also sent its foreign minister Ri Su Yong to attend the Southeast Asian
meetings.
The US said
the impoverished state could not expect international economic assistance at
the same time as pursuing nuclear weapons and conducting missile tests.
“North
Korea can’t have both guns and butter,” the State Department official said.
But the
festering South China Sea dispute is leading Sunday’s agenda.
While China
says it is not the aggressor in the disputed waters, Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi on Saturday warned that “the Chinese side is bound to make clear and
firm reactions” if provoked.
Wang held a
bilateral meeting with his American counterpart on Saturday.
In a
statement released by the Chinese embassy in Myanmar following the talks,
Beijing welcomed “the constructive role” played by the US in regional affairs,
adding that it “hopes that the US can respect China’s legitimate rights and
interests in this region”.
Agence France-Presse
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