The Borneo Post

Mattis: US alarmed by China’s ‘predatory’ practices

-

HANOI: The United States is alarmed by China’s increasing­ly muscular military presence and ‘ predatory economic practices’ towards smaller countries in Asia, defence chief James Mattis has said on his way to the region.

Speaking as he flew out for a diplomatic tour that will take him to Vietnam and Singapore, the US Defence Secretary said Washington was not trying to hold back its Pacific rival.

“Obviously, we’re not out to contain China,” he told reporters.

“We’d have taken an altogether different stance had that been considered.”

“We’re two large powers, or two Pacific powers, two economic powers. There’s going to be times we step on each other’s toes, so we’re going to have to find a way to productive­ly manage our relationsh­ip,” he said.

But he highlighte­d key sticking points with Beijing, remarking that the same issues have also rattled some of China’s neighbours.

“We remain highly concerned with continued militarisa­tion of features in the South China Sea,” Mattis said on a flight to Ho Chi Minh City, the former capital of the US-backed southern regime.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea – building a growing roster of military installati­ons on reefs and artificial islands there – even though Taiwan, the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam all claim parts of strategic waterway.

Washington regularly conducts freedom of navigation exercises in the sea and earlier this month US defence officials said a Chinese warship sailed within yards of an American destroyer forcing it to change course.

Mattis also singled out what he described as ‘predatory economic behaviour’ by Beijing “where massive debt is piled on countries that fiscal analysis would say they are going to have difficulty, at best, repaying in the smaller countries”.

Sri Lanka famously gave Beijing a 99-year lease to a deep sea port after it was unable to pay back Chinese loans for the US$ 1.4 billion project.

Mattis’s visit comes amid escalating tensions between the two superpower­s over trade, Beijing’s growing military might and allegation­s by the US that China is interferin­g in the American electoral process.

His visit to China scheduled for later this month was cancelled because of those tensions. — AFP

 ??  ?? Mattis (right) shakes hands with an official upon his arrival in Ho Chi Minh City. — AFP photo
Mattis (right) shakes hands with an official upon his arrival in Ho Chi Minh City. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia