South China Morning Post

US Pacific Fleet commander set to meet his Chinese counterpar­ts at symposium

- William Zheng and Alyssa Chen

Some 180 navy representa­tives from 29 countries will gather in the port city of Qingdao today for the launch of the Western Pacific Naval Symposium (WPNS), the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has said.

Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Admiral Stephen Koehler, will be leading the American delegation to the four-day event hosted by the Chinese navy, according to diplomatic sources.

Koehler is expected to meet “his Chinese counterpar­ts” during the symposium, themed “Seas of Shared Future”, a diplomat with knowledge of the matter said.

“Both sides are looking for more communicat­ions,” said a second diplomatic source, who also confirmed that Koehler would attend.

This comes just four days after US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke to his Chinese counterpar­t, Admiral Dong Jun.

Tuesday’s video conference was the first US-China exchange at the defence chief level in nearly 17 months and the first since Dong was appointed to the role in December.

Apart from the United States, navy representa­tives attending this year will include those from Russia, Japan, Australia, Cambodia, Chile, France, India, Indonesia, South Korea, Pakistan, and the United Kingdom, according to Senior Colonel Qu Tao from the office of the PLA

Navy staff department. The 19th edition of the biennial meeting comes as maritime safety risks and challenges intensify in the region.

At a press briefing in Qingdao yesterday, Qu said the WPNS had grown into an important platform for navies of various countries to “engage in communicat­ion, enhance mutual trust and deepen cooperatio­n”.

The Chinese navy was willing to work together with its counterpar­ts to promote global and regional marine governance, tackle maritime safety risks and challenges, and advance the building of a marine community with a shared future, Qu said.

China last hosted the WPNS in 2014.

The expected talks between the US and Chinese navy chiefs would be the latest in a series of high-level exchanges between the world’s top two military powers since a presidenti­al summit in California in November following months of heightened tensions.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who recently met Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Germany, is also expected to travel to China this week. Blinken’s trip, his second in less than a year, comes close on the heels of a visit by US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

“With tensions running high in the South China Sea, Taiwan Strait and the East China Sea … this year’s symposium will also provide opportunit­ies for countries to express their concerns and worries in the maritime field and deepen their understand­ings,” Zhu Feng, executive dean of Nanjing University’s School of Internatio­nal Studies, said.

Song Zhongping, a former PLA instructor, said new developmen­ts at sea, including the use of unmanned aerial vehicles and surface vessels for surveillan­ce and other functions, were fuelling the need to develop more consensus on how to control or prevent unintentio­nal collisions.

“Unmanned systems pose new challenges to the establishm­ent of maritime safety mechanisms, highlighti­ng potential dangers to maritime security,” Song said.

“Addressing these new crises and sources of danger is key for this year’s forum, to upgrade the mechanism for unplanned encounters at sea.”

State media reported in January that countries taking part in a WPNS-related workshop had approved a proposal to discuss the formation of a working group dedicated to exploring ways to prevent drone collisions.

Analysts said the presence of Koehler highlighte­d the need for US-China military officials at all levels to boost links and cooperatio­n and reduce misjudgmen­t.

Zhu at Nanjing University said the likely talks between senior Chinese and US navy officials at the WPNS could “facilitate frank dialogue across multiple levels and fields and help stabilise bilateral ties”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China