Business World

Trump offers to mediate in S. China Sea row

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HANOI — US President Donald Trump said on a visit to Vietnam on Sunday he was prepared to mediate between claimants to the South China Sea, where five countries contest China’s sweeping claims to the busy waterway.

Vietnam has become the most vocal opponent of China’s claims and its constructi­on and militariza­tion of artificial islands in the sea, through which about $3-trillion in goods pass each year.

“If I can help mediate or arbitrate, please let me know,” Mr. Trump said in comments at the start of a meeting in Hanoi with Vietnam’s president, Tran Dai Quang.

Mr. Trump acknowledg­ed that China’s position on the South China Sea was a problem.

“I’m a very good mediator and arbitrator,” he said.

Vietnam has also reclaimed land around reefs and islets, but on nowhere near the same scale as China. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Taiwan also have claims in the sea.

The South China Sea was discussed in Beijing on an earlier leg of Mr. Trump’s 12- day Asian tour and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the United States and China had a frank exchange of views. The United States has angered China with freedom of navigation patrols close to Chinese- controlled islands, which have been continued by the Trump administra­tion. In August, foreign ministers of Southeast Asia and China adopted a negotiatin­g framework for a code of conduct in the South China Sea, a move they hailed as progress but one seen by critics as a tactic to buy China time to consolidat­e its maritime power. The framework seeks to advance a 2002 Declaratio­n of Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, which has mostly been ignored by claimant states, particular­ly China, which has built seven man- made islands in disputed waters, three of them equipped with runways, surface-to-air missiles and radars.

All parties say the framework is only an outline for how the code will be establishe­d but critics say the failure to outline, as an initial objective, the need to make the code legally binding and enforceabl­e, or have a dispute resolution mechanism, raises doubts about how effective the pact will be.

The framework will be endorsed by China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at a summit in Manila on Monday, a diplomat from one of the bloc’s members said. The next step is for ASEAN and China to start formal talks for the actual Code of Conduct, and the earliest that talks on this can start is February 2018, the diplomat said.

From Vietnam, Mr. Trump flies to the Philippine­s for a meeting with ASEAN leaders before he heads back to Washington. —

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