China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chang calls for closer ties with ASEAN member states

- By ZHAO SHENGNAN in Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei

right and wrong in terms of historical facts. And we oppose any attempts to internatio­nalize, escalate or complicate the disputes,” Wang said.

“We are ready to work together with the ASEAN countries to make active efforts to jointly maintain regional peace and stability,” he said at a news conference.

Chang also hailed China- ASEAN achievemen­ts in defense and security, urging Asia-Pacific countries to strengthen their sense of being “a community of destiny”, and jointly guarantee security through dialogue while enhancing mutual trust.

A joint declaratio­n issued on Thursday also spoke highly of the concerned parties’ cooperatio­n in disaster relief, maritime rescue, military medicine, counterter­rorism and peacekeepi­ng over the past three years since the first such meeting was held in Vietnam in 2010.

China previously said it is willing to engage in future consultati­ons on a South China Sea “code of conduct”, a binding set of rules urged by countries led by the Philippine­s.

However, tensions escalated again after Manila kept pressuring Beijing with moves such as planning to relocate one of its naval bases closer to the South China Sea and to invite more US forces to the base.

Meanwhile, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel called for restraint on Wednesday during the gathering in Brunei.

The Pentagon chief underscore­d the US focus on the Asia-Pacific region, but warned his fellow defense ministers that a growing number of maritime incidents and tensions in Asian waters increases the risk of a dangerous internatio­nal confrontat­ion.

Hagel is on the third leg of a weeklong trip in Southeast Asia, which includes Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippine­s before he returns to Washington on Friday.

On Tuesday, he announced the sale of eight Apache helicopter­s to Indonesia during a visit to Jakarta, the latest of the Pentagon’s offering of ships, radar and other military assistance to countries in Southeast Asia, which is widely seen as a counterbal­ance to China.

But during a recent interview with BBC, Hagel insisted such sales were not “about encircling China or anybody else”, but “about prosperity, stability and security”.

AFP contribute­d to this story.

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