Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

In new summit, Biden seeks ‘free and open’ Pacific with Australia, India, Japan

-

WASHINGTON, Sept 25, (AFP) - President Joe Biden and the leaders of Australia, India and Japan promised Friday to work together for a stable, open and democratic Indo-Pacific in a veiled dig at China during their first in-person summit together.

In Biden's latest effort to cement US leadership in the face of a rising China, the so-called Quad agreed to move ahead on a joint plan to provide Covid-19 vaccines around Asia, launched a new climate initiative and said the four nations would begin holding annual summits.

Without any explicit mention of China, the leaders of the four democracie­s in a joint statement said they were committed to “promoting the free, open, rules-based order, rooted in internatio­nal law and undaunted by coercion.” “We stand for the rule of law, freedom of navigation and overflight, peaceful resolution of disputes, democratic values and territoria­l integrity of states,” they said.

“Free and open” has become code for expressing worry about swelling Chinese economic, diplomatic and military presence -- including threats to vital internatio­nal sea lanes.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, speaking as the talks opened, said that the four “liberal democracie­s” were working to build a “strong, stable and prosperous region.” Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the summit showed the four nations' “common vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific,” while Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- whose own track record on minority rights has been controvers­ial at home -- hailed the Quad's “shared democratic values.” While the leaders carefully avoided public mention of China, Suga voiced “strong concern” during the talks about Beijing's assertiven­ess at sea, its trampling of Hong Kong's special status and its mass incarcerat­ion of the Uyghur

minority, Japanese foreign ministry spokesman Tomoyuki Yoshida said.

Biden, who often talks about democracie­s needing to prove their capability in an age of powerful autocracie­s in Russia and China, sought to show the Quad was about action.

“We're four major democracie­s with a long history of cooperatio­n. We know how to get things done and we are up to the challenge,” he said.

India said it would export eight million one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccines by the end of next month.

“This is an immediate delivery from

the Quad into the Indo-Pacific region,” Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla told reporters, vowing to supply “quality and affordable” vaccines.

While modest in number -- Biden promised earlier this week that the US would donate an extra 500 million doses to the world -- it represents the return of India's giant pharmaceut­ical industry after New Delhi stopped exports to handle the country's own severe Covid outbreak.

During virtual talks in March, the Quad leaders said they would supply more than one billion vaccines by the end of 2022, with India providing production, Japan and the United States financing and Australia the logistics.

On another key priority for Biden, the Quad leaders said the four nations would all make “ambitious” announceme­nts at the upcoming Glasgow climate summit with an aim of bringing the warming planet to net zero emissions by 2050.

India has so far only committed to reducing its carbon intensity, not necessaril­y its emissions, arguing that sweeping cuts are unrealisti­c for an emerging economy that is not historical­ly responsibl­e for most of the world's warming.

 ?? Photo Twitter PMOIndia ?? From left, PM Yoshihide Suga of Japan, PM Narendra Modi, President Biden, and Australian PM Scott Morrison pose for a photo before the Quad meeting Sept. 24, 2021.
Photo Twitter PMOIndia From left, PM Yoshihide Suga of Japan, PM Narendra Modi, President Biden, and Australian PM Scott Morrison pose for a photo before the Quad meeting Sept. 24, 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka