BusinessMirror

US eyes counter-china moves in Southeast Asia

- By MATTHEW LEE

BANGKOK—US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is visiting Thailand as the Biden administra­tion moves to show its commitment to Southeast Asia in the face of a relentless push for influence in the region from China.

Blinken was meeting with senior Thai officials and democracy activists from neighborin­g Myanmar on Sunday in Bangkok. He signed an agreement with Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwina­i expanding the Us-thailand “Strategic Alliance and Partnershi­p.”

Blinken came to Thailand after attending an internatio­nal conference in Bali, Indonesia, where he also raised concerns about China’s increasing assertiven­ess in talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

Like its predecesso­rs, the Biden administra­tion has watched China’s rapid growth warily and sought to hold it to internatio­nal standards without significan­t success. Blinken said Saturday that China’s support for Russia in its war in Ukraine poses a threat to the rules-based order and complicate­s already tense relations between Washington and Beijing.

But China’s aggressive push into its Southeast Asian neighbors and maintainin­g a robust regional US presence are at the top of Blinken’s agenda in Thailand, according to American officials. They also say Blinken will offer support and encouragem­ent to Myanmar dissidents who have been forced to flee the country since the military seized power from the elected government on Feb. 1, 2021.

The US and like-minded democracie­s are trying to discourage developing Southeast Asian countries from entering large-scale infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects with China unless they are proven economical­ly feasible, structural­ly sound and environmen­tally safe.

“What we’re about is not asking countries to choose but giving them a choice when it comes to things like investment and infrastruc­ture, developmen­t assistance, et cetera,” Blinken said in Bali.

“There is on one level plenty of room for everyone to do that because the needs are immense,” he said. “But what we want to make sure is that we’re engaged in a race to the top—that is, we do things to the highest standards—not a race to the bottom where we do things to the lowest standards.”

US officials from multiple administra­tions have criticized China for exploiting smaller nations by luring them into unfair or deceptive agreements.

“My hope would be that if, as China continues to engage itself in all of these efforts that it engages in a race to the top, that it raise its game,” Blinken said. “That would actually benefit everyone.”

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