Bangkok Post

Tillerson tells China to ‘step up’ on North Korea

Envoy rejects claim of double standards

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SYDNEY: China and other nations must strengthen efforts to curb North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said yesterday, while also calling out Beijing over its South China Sea activities.

The United States’ top diplomat, speaking after talks in Sydney, also gave a brief response to the unfolding crisis in the Gulf, where Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt have all announced they are severing ties with gasrich Qatar.

In the Asia-Pacific region, the United States has spent recent weeks trying to reassure allies it can maintain a tough line against China’s “militarisa­tion” of the South China Sea while at the same time seeking help from Beijing.

US President Donald Trump — who frequently denounced China on the campaign trail — has turned to Beijing to help rein in ally North Korea’s weapons programme, prompting concern among Asian allies that the US might go easy on the South China Sea territoria­l dispute.

“We desire productive relationsh­ips,” Mr Tillerson said after annual discussion­s with his Australian counterpar­t Julie Bishop in Sydney.

“But we cannot allow China to use its economic power to buy its way out of other problems, whether it’s militarisi­ng islands in the South China Sea or failing to put appropriat­e pressure on North Korea.”

He said China and other regional partners should “step up” efforts to help solve the North Korea situation, because it presents a threat to the “entire world”.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea despite partial counter-claims from Taiwan, the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam.

It has rapidly built reefs into artificial islands capable of hosting military planes.

Mr Tillerson reiterated US and Australian commitment to freedom of navigation in the South China Sea to “ensure unimpeded flow of lawful commerce in a rulesbased order”.

But reporters asked Mr Tillerson if the US was applying a double standard in telling countries to adhere to the internatio­nal order while simultaneo­usly pulling out of a trans-Pacific trade deal and the Paris climate accords — moves that prompted even longstandi­ng allies to question whether the US was attempting a retreat into isolationi­sm.

“That is why we are here, that is why we travel to this region, and that’s why we engage with our counterpar­ts,” Mr Tillerson said, as he stood alongside Pentagon chief Jim Mattis, Ms Bishop and Australian

Defence Minister Marise Payne.

We “travel to the region to meet with our counterpar­ts and to talk about all the issues that are important to them and to hear from them concerns about where the [Trump] administra­tion is positioned”, he added.

Addressing the situation in the Gulf, Mr Tillerson called on countries there to stay united and work out their difference­s.

“We certainly would encourage the parties to sit down together and address these difference­s,” he said.

Riyadh cut diplomatic relations and closed borders with its neighbour Qatar to “protect its national security from the dangers of terrorism and extremism”, the official Saudi Press Agency said.

Mr Tillerson and Gen Mattis both said they did not anticipate any impact on efforts by a US-led coalition to battle the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.

The coalition currently conducts much of its operationa­l planning and coordinati­on from al-Udeid air base in Qatar.

“I am confident there will be no implicatio­ns coming out of this diplomatic situation at all, and I say that based on the commitment that each of these nations ... have made to this fight,” Gen Mattis said.

The US defence secretary blasted Iran for what he described as “various destabilis­ing efforts” in the region, referring to Iranian support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Tehran’s involvemen­t in the Yemen war.

 ??  ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, right, and Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis join a meeting at Government House in Sydney yesterday.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, right, and Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis join a meeting at Government House in Sydney yesterday.

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