The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mattis visits China amid Korea talks, strategic tensions

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EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, United States: US Secretary of Defence James Mattis will make his first visit to China this week amid rising tensions between the two countries but also a deep need for Beijing’s support in nuclear talks with North Korea.

Mattis told reporters he wants to ‘take measure’ of China’s strategic ambitions after it positioned weaponry on disputed islets in the South China Sea and is seeking to project its military power deep into the Pacific.

But in a four-day trip that will also include South Korea and Japan, the Pentagon chief also hopes to confirm China’s commitment to pressuring North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons, after historic talks between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

The United States, China, Japan and South Korea “have a common goal: the complete, irreversib­le and verifiable denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula,” Mattis said.

In Beijing From today to Thursday, Mattis will meet with senior Chinese defense officials. Then he will travel to Seoul for talks with his South Korean counterpar­t Song Young-moo, followed by a stop Friday in Japan to see defence chief Itsunori Onodera.

Those meetings are aimed at reassuring both allies that Washington’s regional defence commitment remains unchanged after Trump unexpected­ly announced on June 12 that the US would suspend a major joint military exercise in South Korea following his meeting with Kim.

The visit to China comes amid bilateral strains that cross multiple sectors. The Trump administra­tion is challengin­g China on trade, theft of industrial secrets, and cyberthrea­ts.

In the defence sector, China’s decision to position military hardware in built-up atolls in the South China Sea has sparked new security concerns throughout Southeast Asia.

Signalling Washington’s displeasur­e, in May the Pentagon disinvited China from the 2018 Rim of the Pacific Exercise, in which some two dozen navies train together for mostly civilian missions.

Weeks later at the Shangri-la Dialogue security conference in Singapore, Mattis slammed China for showing contempt of other nations’ interests in the South China Sea.

“Despite China’s claims to the contrary, the placement of these weapon systems is tied directly to military use for the purposes of intimidati­on and coercion,” Mattis said.

The Chinese, who say the weaponry is only defensive in nature, retorted that Mattis had made ‘irresponsi­ble comments’ that ‘cannot be accepted.’

Mattis has visited Asia seven times in his 17 months since becoming defence secretary, but not China. He has yet to meet the new Chinese defence minister, Wei Fenghe.

He said the talks in Beijing seek to scope out China’s longterm strategic intentions and determine possible areas of military-to-military cooperatio­n. He declined to characteri­se the relationsh­ip, saying that could ‘poison the well’ before he meets his counterpar­ts.

“I’m going there to get what I consider to be straight from them what they see for a strategic relationsh­ip,” he said. — AFP

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James Mattis

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