The Sun (Malaysia)

Where’s the cooperatio­n?

> Apec members upset that the US and China used the summit to attack each other’s policies amid their trade war

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PORT MORESBY: The C in Apec stands for Cooperatio­n. But when the two biggest members are fighting a trade war and using the forum to attack each other’s policies, it was always going to be hard work delivering on that.

The weekend’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) summit in Port Moresby was one of open disagreeme­nt, led by disputes between the United States and China over trade, security and which would be the better investment partner for the region.

As Apec approaches its 30th anniversar­y, the failure to agree on a communique for the first time calls into question its relevance in a crowded summit calendar and as the Trump administra­tion makes clear its aversion to multilater­alism.

“It does mark the death of Apec’s founding trade vision,” Euan Graham, executive director of La Trobe Asia at Australia’s La Trobe University, said on Twitter, adding Apec was the “most disposable of the regional summits”.

Rather than cooperatio­n, the theme seemed to be conflict and containmen­t as Beijing and Washington directly criticised each other’s policies and staked their claims as to why they were the security and investment partner the Pacific should choose.

“It’s not even supposed to be binding, it’s Apec,” said one diplomat involved in negotiatio­ns for the communique, surprised that the members could not agree on what is usually a humdrum summary of issues discussed.

“China and the US hijacked the Apec spirit, I suppose.”

The United States even preferred its own terminolog­y of Indo-Pacific, which it defines as running from “the western shores of Latin America to the furthest reaches of the Indian Ocean”, with US Vice-President Mike Pence mentioning Apec five times and Indo-Pacific 41 times in his Apec speech on Saturday.

Without mentioning China by name, the US State Department sought to cast the blame for the lack of a communique elsewhere, lamenting what it characteri­sed as the unwillingn­ess of some to sign on to a statement agreeing to promote free and fair trade.

“It is unfortunat­e that not all economies – despite their rhetoric – could support these positions,” it said in a statement.

Speaking in Beijing on Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said the United States attended Apec in a “blaze of anger”, causing disputes and disagreeme­nts and damaging the “harmonious atmosphere” of the meeting.

“Apec is a platform to deepen cooperatio­n, not a place to criticise each other. China attended to promote cooperatio­n and seek consensus, not to get into a boxing ring,” Geng told reporters. – Reuters

 ??  ?? A billboard displays the national flags of the United States and Papua New Guinea on Monday, a day after the Apec forum ended in Papua New Guinea.
A billboard displays the national flags of the United States and Papua New Guinea on Monday, a day after the Apec forum ended in Papua New Guinea.

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