The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Territoria­l rows could spiral into confrontat­ion, Obama warns Asia

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BRISBANE, Australia: US President Barack Obama yesterday warned of the dangers of out r ight con f l ict in Asia, as China squares of f against r iva l claimants over disputed territorie­s, but vowed that Washington would remain anchored in the region.

In a speech at Br isbane’s University of Queensland, Obama insisted that his ‘pivot’ of US policy back to Asia was real and here to stay.

In the talk, given on the margins of the G20 summit, the president reviewed the stunning economic progress seen i n East Asia since World War II.

“Yet alongside this dynamism, there are genuine dangers that can undermine this progress,” he said, citing Nor th Korea for one and adding: “Disputes over territory — remote islands and rocky shoals — that threaten to spiral into confrontat­ion.”

China is locked in dispute with four Southeast Asian countries over lonely outcrops in the South China Sea and with Japan over another set of islets.

Obama repeated his insistence given in Beijing this week, after talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, that the United States welcomes the rise of China provided it is a peaceful and responsibl­e player on the world stage.

But China, he stressed in Brisbane, must “adhere to the same ru les as other nations, whether i n trade or on the seas”.

And the United States will continue to be “frank where there are di f ferences” with Beijing, Obama said.

An effective security order for Asia must be based “not on spheres of i nfluence, or coercion or intimidati­on where big nations bully the small”, he said, but on alliances built on respect.

Four members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations ( Asean) — Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Vietnam — claim parts of t he South China Sea, a key shipping lane believed to be rich i n undersea gas deposits.

But China says almost all of the sea is its own, including waters near to the shores of its smaller neighbours.

A series of incidents earlier this year led Vietnam and the Philippine­s to decry Chinese acts of aggression at sea, plunging relations with Beijing to a nadir.

Both China and Asean need ‘peace and stability’, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said in a speech at Thursday’s East Asia Summit in Myanmar that included Asean leaders and Obama.

In an apparent bid to defuse the regional tensions, Li offered 20 billion in Chinese loans and a telephone hotline, and f loated the possibilit­y of a “friendship treaty” with Asean nations.

The hotline has been among the proposals in low-level talks between Asean and Chinese of f icials on a legal ly binding code of conduct to ease tensions in the South China Sea.

Militarily and economical­ly weaker than China, Southeast Asian countries are desperate for a mu lt i latera l code, but accuse their g iant neighbour of stalling, and are also anxious to retain US support.

China prefers to use its economic and political clout in one-on-one negotiatio­ns with rival claimants.

And in a sign of the lingering challenges ahead, Li also warned that “China’s resolve to safeguard territoria­l sovereig nty is clear”.

Obama spelt out the enduring stakes for the United States.

“Generation­s of Americans have served and died here so that the people of the AsiaPacifi­c might live free. So no one should ever question our resolve or our commitment­s to our allies,” he said in his Brisbane speech.

“Day i n, day out, stead i ly, deliberate­ly, we will continue to deepen our engagement using every element of our power — diplomacy, military, economic, developmen­t and the power of our values.”

 ??  ?? Barack Obama
Barack Obama

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