The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia warns against US-China tensions

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SYDNEY: China’s rising and ‘unpreceden­ted influence’ in the Indo-Pacific region will challenge American interests, but confrontat­ion must not define relations between the two powers, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison warned yesterday.

In his first major foreign policy speech, Morrison tried to tread a careful line between Australia’s alliance with the United States and engaging a rapidly and evermore assertive China.

“Inevitably, in the period ahead, we will be navigating a higher degree of US-China strategic competitio­n,” Morrison told the Asia Society Australia in Sydney.

“It is important that US-China relations do not become defined by confrontat­ion,” he said, against a backdrop of the two economic behemoths trading economic sanctions and countersan­ctions in an ever-deeping trade dispute. Australia — a member of the ‘Five Eyes’ Western intelligen­ce alliance and with long-standing and close military ties with Washington — finds itself slapbang in the middle of one of the 21st century’s geopolitic­al hotspots.

A quiet battle is raging for influence in the South Pacific — a region of small island states that is vital to internatio­nal shipping and provides a stepping stone for Beijing and Washington to project military and economic power across the Pacific region.

“As economic power shifts, it’s unsurprisi­ng that nations will seek to play a bigger strategic role in our region,” said Morrison.

“China, in particular, is exercising unpreceden­ted influence in the Indo-Pacific,” he said.

“China is the country that is most changing the balance of power, sometimes in ways that challenge important US interests.” —

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