Vancouver Sun

DEFENCE MINISTER HARJIT SAJJAN WON'T GO AS FAR AS TO DESCRIBE CHINA AS AN ADVERSARY.

BUT HE DOESN'T HESITATE TO LIST THE MANY WAYS IN WHICH CHINA'S RECENT ACTIONS HAVE RAISED RED FLAGS IN OTTAWA.

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is taking aim at what he describes as China's unpredicta­bility, refusal to play by the rules and expanding footprint around the world, saying those are among the “significan­t” concerns Canada and its allies have with Beijing.

The comments come amid growing alarm over China's increasing­ly assertive foreign policy, which has led Canadian military commanders and others to increasing­ly focus on what is being described as the next great power competitio­n.

The last great power competitio­n saw Canada and its NATO allies face off against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

Sajjan declined in an interview with The Canadian Press to describe China as an adversary even as he emphasized the importance of talk and diplomacy in dealing with the Chinese government.

Yet the defence minister was also quick to list the many ways in which China's recent actions have set off red flags in Ottawa and other western capitals, underscori­ng the importance of possessing a credible military response should it be required.

Those actions include the continued detention of two Canadians in apparent retaliatio­n for Canada's arrest in 2018 of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou, who is wanted in the United States on fraud charges.

While the dispute has had a serious impact on Canada- China relations, Sajjan suggested the arrest and detention of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor also spoke to broader concerns about China flaunting internatio­nal rules, norms and treaties.

“The unpredicta­bility that China has been showing the world — not just to Canada — is giving all of us significan­t concern,” he said.

“When a country arrests two Canadians, it is not a message to Canada, it is a message to the rest of the world is saying: `This is how we will do diplomacy.' ”

Sajjan, who has previously described the detention of the two Michaels as “hostage diplomacy,” also flagged concerns how China is spreading its influence around the world.

The Chinese government has been increasing­ly assertive in its own neighbourh­ood, staking claim to the South China Sea and other waterways while taking a harder line with Taiwan and cracking down on democracy in Hong Kong.

Yet Sajjan also expressed apprehensi­on over how China has been spreading money around to different parts of world.

“We look at China's expansion into other parts of the world right now as a concern, based on how they're dealing with smaller nations in terms of how they provide the support that has created this economic kind of dependency,” he said.

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