US’ Mattis looks for ‘way ahead’ after China scraps military talks
WASHINGTON — US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Monday he was seeking a way ahead for military ties with China after Beijing postponed military talks in protest at last week’s US decision to impose sanctions over China’s purchase of Russian weaponry.
Mattis traveled to China in June in an attempt to deepen military-to-military dialogue with Beijing, even as Sino-US trade tensions climb and anxiety in Washington grows over China’s modernization of its armed forces and its increasingly muscular military posture in the South China Sea.
“We believe that we do have to have a relationship with China and Secretary (of State Mike) Pompeo and I are of one mind on this,” Mattis told reporters at the Pentagon.
“And so we’re sorting out the way ahead right now.”
China’s Defense Ministry has said it would recall navy chief Shen Jinlong from a visit to the United States and postpone planned talks in Beijing between Chinese and US military officials that had been set for next week.
It added that China’s military reserved the right to take further countermeasures.
At the Pentagon, Lieutenant Colonel Dave Eastburn confirmed that the US military had been informed that China’s Navy chief would no longer meet America’s top naval officer, Admiral John Richardson.
“We have no additional information at this time,” he said. —