South China Morning Post

Minister credits ‘bamboo diplomacy’ for balancing ties with China and US

- Khushboo Razdan khushboo.razdan@scmp.com

Vietnam’s foreign minister has credited his communist-ruled nation’s “bamboo diplomacy” for successful­ly balancing its relations with the rival global powers of China and the United States, and said the recent resignatio­n of President Vo Van Thuong would not be destabilis­ing.

“In 2023, Vietnam hosted both US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping – which means Vietnam wishes and can have good relations with all major powers, thanks to Vietnam’s bamboo diplomacy,” Bui Thanh Son said at the Brookings Institutio­n, a US think tank.

In September, Biden visited Hanoi and the US and Vietnam – two long-time foes – upgraded their diplomatic ties to a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p.

Three months later, Xi travelled to Hanoi on a state visit. With 37 bilateral deals, including on railways and telecommun­ications, Beijing and Hanoi ushered in what they described as a “golden era” of bilateral ties.

“Competitio­n among major powers is natural, but conflict is not inevitable,” Son said, welcoming efforts to stabilise US-China relations after Biden and Xi held talks in November.

On Monday, Son had meetings with senior Biden administra­tion officials, including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, the first ministeria­l-level talks since the upgrade in ties.

The discussion­s ranged from cooperatio­n in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and diversific­ation of supply chains to critical minerals and artificial intelligen­ce.

Son’s visit came as Vietnam strives to assure neighbours, allies and investors that the surprise resignatio­n last week of the president over corruption allegation­s would not lead to any political instabilit­y.

“The resignatio­n of the president, I think, will not affect our foreign policy as well as our own [domestic] policy of economic developmen­t. We have collective leadership. We have collective foreign policy. We have collective-decided economic-path developmen­t,” Son said.

A week ago, a senior official of Vietnam’s Communist Party travelled to Beijing as part of an effort to “enhance political trust and consolidat­e a peaceful environmen­t” and improve cooperatio­n in “all fields”, according to the state-run Vietnam News Agency.

Son said “the region’s peace, stability and prosperity cannot be taken for granted” as it had become a “theatre for strategic competitio­n” with many flash points, including the South China Sea, where both China and Vietnam had overlappin­g territoria­l claims. He urged the major powers to act responsibl­y.

With Washington’s pivot away from Beijing, Hanoi has received new-found attention from major investors and superpower­s, managing to woo big tech players from both the West and China and developing its status as a manufactur­ing hub.

Vietnam has also upgraded diplomatic ties with US allies such as Japan and Australia, and is part of Biden’s 14-member IndoPacifi­c Economic Framework for Prosperity grouping that intends to strengthen economic ties between the US and Southeast Asian allies to counter China’s regional influence.

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