The Borneo Post

Mattis reassures allies as US turns to China on North Korea

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SINGAPORE: Pentagon chief Jim Mattis moved to reassure Asian allies yesterday that the United States can work with China on reining in North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme without compromisi­ng its opposition to Beijing’s continued ‘militarisa­tion’ of the South China Sea.

President Donald Trump – who frequently denounced China on the campaign trail – has turned to Beijing to help pressure Pyongyang, prompting broad concerns that America will go easy on China’s maritime activities.

Longstandi­ng partners are also mortified that Trump has seemed indifferen­t to traditiona­l alliances, and have interprete­d his pulling out of a trans-Pacific trade deal and the Paris climate accords as signs of broader American disengagem­ent. Mattis, arguably Trump’s most important statesman as the new president tries to slash the State Department, tried to allay the fears.

“In the security arena, we have a deep and abiding commitment to reinforcin­g the rules-based internatio­nal order, a product of so many nations’ efforts to create stability,” Mattis said in Singapore at the Shangri-La Dialogue, a major defence summit for countries from the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.

Calling North Korea’s nuclear ambitions a ‘threat to us all,’ Mattis asked the internatio­nal community to come together on the issue.

It is “imperative that we do our part each of us to fulfill our obligation­s and work together to support our shared goal of denucleari­sation on the Korean Peninsula,” Mattis said.

“The Trump administra­tion is encouraged by China’s renewed commitment to work with the internatio­nal community toward denucleari­sation,” he added.

Pyongyang on Monday testfired another rocket, the latest in a series of launches and atomic tests that have ratcheted up tensions over its quest to develop weapons capable of hitting the United States – something Trump has said “won’t happen”.

The defence chief spoke directly to concerns America might grant concession­s to China to ensure cooperatio­n on North Korea, saying the issue was not ‘binary’ and that the United States would continue to pressure Beijing elsewhere. — AFP

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Visitors look at two corpse flowers at the Chicago Botanic Garden in Chicago, Illinois. It is unusual enough to see one of nature’s biggest, rarest – not to mention smelliest – flowers bloom. But it is extraordin­ary to see two bloom at once. That is...
 ??  ?? South Korea’s Defence Minister Han Min-koo shows Mattis and Japan’s Defence Minister Tomomi Inada how to do a handshake during a trilateral meeting on the sidelines of the 16th IISS ShangriLa Dialogue in Singapore. — Reuters photo
South Korea’s Defence Minister Han Min-koo shows Mattis and Japan’s Defence Minister Tomomi Inada how to do a handshake during a trilateral meeting on the sidelines of the 16th IISS ShangriLa Dialogue in Singapore. — Reuters photo

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