The Freeman

Mattis in China for talks

Focusing on strategic security issues

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EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis laid out plans for a less contentiou­s, more open dialogue with Chinese leaders as he travels to Asia, less than a month after he slammed Beijing at an internatio­nal conference for its militariza­tion of islands in the South China Sea.

Speaking to reporters on his plane Sunday en route to a stop in Alaska, Mattis avoided any of the sharp criticism of China that he had voiced recently. Instead, he insisted that he is going into the talks with Chinese leaders without any preconceiv­ed notions, and wants to focus on larger, more strategic security issues.

According to officials, a key topic of the discussion­s later this week will be the denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula and the role China can play, considerin­g its longstandi­ng friendship with North Korea.

"I want to go in right now without basically poisoning the well at this point. I'm going there to have a conversati­on," said Mattis. "I do not want to immediatel­y go in with a certain preset expectatio­n of what they are going to say. I want to go in and do a lot of listening."

Mattis' more diplomatic tack reflects the U.S. administra­tion's recognitio­n of China's crucial influence on Korea as negotiatio­ns move ahead to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear program.

One senior U.S. official said that while Mattis will willingly lay out America's position on China's military buildup in the South China Sea and other points of contention, the Pentagon chief doesn't want to open the conversati­ons with "the irritants." Instead, the goal is to have higher quality talks about the two countries' military relationsh­ip, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons on the trip.

Last month, however, Mattis abruptly disinvited China from a multinatio­nal exercise in the Pacific that will begin in a few days, in retributio­n for Beijing putting weapons systems on manmade islands in the South China Sea. And days later he publicly threatened "much larger consequenc­es in the future" if the militariza­tion continued.

China recently has deployed anti-ship missiles, surface-to-air missiles, electronic jammers and other equipment on the Spratly Islands, and landed a bomber aircraft at Woody Island. China says it is within its rights to build up defenses on islands in the South China Sea that it believes are its sovereign territory.

Many nations fear that Beijing will use the constructi­on on the islands to extend its military reach and potentiall­y try to restrict navigation in the South China Sea.

It's all but certain the Chinese will raise those issues with Mattis, as well as Beijing's long-held opposition to increasing U.S. contacts with Taiwan. China claims the self-ruled island as its territory.

For the U.S., however, North Korea will be a primary topic in the talks with senior Chinese leaders. And while the U.S. would like to see China use its influence to reinfore the denucleari­zation negotiatio­ns with North Korea, it also wants Beijing to remain committed to enforcing sanctions against the North, as part of the pressure campaign.

China also is likely pleased that the U.S. has suspended any major military exercises with South Korea as part of the nuclear negotiatio­ns.

Mattis said Sunday that the Pentagon cancelled two Marine military exchanges as well as the larger Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercise this fall, because the defense department considered them consistent with what President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had agreed on at the summit about two weeks ago.

The U.S. has also long been frustrated that China doesn't share much informatio­n about any war scenarios or other contingenc­ies it has in place in the event of a conflict on the Korean peninsula or the collapse of the North Korean government.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is accompanie­d by an officer of the US military in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is accompanie­d by an officer of the US military in Washington.

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