The Sentinel-Record

EDITORIAL ROUNDUP

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Jan. 12 China Daily Superficia­l help

It is a pity that having witnessed the damage the previous Donald Trump administra­tion did to the United States’ relations with China and the rest of the world, including its allies, the senior Asian policy strategist for the Joe Biden administra­tion has been unable to draw the right lessons from that.

In a speech US Indo-Pacific coordinato­r Kurt Campbell delivered to an Australia-focused panel of the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington on Monday, he admitted that the US “had not done enough to assist” the Pacific, a region in which it has “enormous moral, strategic, historical interests.”

But while saying that the US should do more to help the region, working with “partners like Australia, like New Zealand, like Japan, like France, who have an interest in the Pacific,” his speech was essentiall­y little more than thinly veiled scaremonge­ring about China. …

Given that he has also claimed that the cliques the US has formed in the Asia-Pacific, such as the so-called AUKUS pact and the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue are causing China “heartburn,” it is evident that greater efforts to contain China are what he means by the US and its allies “upping their game.”

In May last year, Campbell claimed the era of engagement with China was over. But he changed his position in July, stating that the US and China can seek peaceful co-existence, and called for the two countries to avoid confrontat­ion in October. Now, he is once again adopting a tough stance against China. Such flip-flopping by a leading strategist of the administra­tion highlights the inherent contradict­ory nature of competitio­n-confrontat­ion-cooperatio­n trichotomy with which the Biden administra­tion has summed up its China policy.

It also shows the extent to which the administra­tion’s foreign policy is being held to ransom by the political situation in the US, as sticking to a tough line on China is a Band-Aid for his domestic agenda.

Campbell’s latest remarks only serve to expose that any forthcomin­g US assistance for the Pacific region will be superficia­l, divisive and self-serving.

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