Los Angeles Times

Blinken urges China to back off from ‘escalation’

Top U.S. diplomat accuses Beijing of using Pelosi’s Taiwan visit as a pretext for ‘provocativ­e’ actions.

- By David Rising

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said Friday that China’s military exercises aimed at Taiwan — including missiles fired into Japan’s exclusive economic zone — represent a “significan­t escalation” and that he has urged Beijing to back down.

China launched the drills after a visit by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan that infuriated Beijing, which claims the self-governed island as its territory.

Blinken told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations in Cambodia that Pelosi’s visit was peaceful and did not represent a change in American policy toward Taiwan. He accused China of using it as a “pretext to increase provocativ­e military activity in and around the Taiwan Strait.”

Blinken said the situation had led to “vigorous communicat­ion” during East Asia Summit meetings in Phnom Penh in which both he and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi took part along with representa­tives from ASEAN nations, Russia and other countries.

“I reiterated the points that we made publicly as well as directly to Chinese counterpar­ts in recent days, again, about the fact that they should not use the visit as a pretext for war, escalation, for provocativ­e actions — that there is no possible justificat­ion for what they’ve done and urge them to cease these actions,” he said.

Blinken did not sit down one-on-one with Wang but said he had spoken with the him already about the possibilit­y of a Pelosi visit to Taiwan before it took place during meetings in Bali, Indonesia, and had made the U.S. position clear.

China on Friday announced unspecifie­d sanctions on Pelosi for her visit. A Foreign Ministry statement said she had disregarde­d China’s concerns and resolute opposition to her trip.

Pelosi (D-San Francisco) received an enthusiast­ic welcome as the first House speaker and highest-ranking elected U.S. official to visit Taiwan in 25 years.

China opposes any engagement by Taiwanese officials with foreign government­s, and has accused the U.S. of breaking the status quo with the Pelosi visit. The U.S. said that there has been no change to its “one-China” position of recognizin­g the government in Beijing while allowing for informal relations and defense ties with Taiwan.

Despite the aggressive Chinese reaction to the visit, Blinken said that the U.S. would not change its “commitment to the security of our allies in the region” and that the Defense Department had ordered the Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier group “to remain on station in the general area to monitor the situation.”

“We will fly, sail and operate wherever internatio­nal law allows,” he said. “We’ll continue to conduct standard air and maritime transits through the Taiwan Strait, consistent with our long-standing approach to working with allies and partners to uphold freedom of navigation and overflight.”

As the East Asia Summit opened, Wang patted Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on the shoulder as he entered the room and gave the already-seated Lavrov a quick wave before taking his own seat. Lavrov waved back in response.

Blinken, who entered the room last, did not even glance at Lavrov as he took his own seat about half a dozen chairs away, or at Wang, who was seated farther down the same table as Lavrov.

Before the talks in Phnom Penh, the State Department indicated that Blinken had no plans to meet one-on-one with either man during the meetings.

Following the meetings, Lavrov told reporters that there had been a lot of “fiery statements” about the aftermath of the Pelosi visit.

“There have been rather sharp statements from our Chinese partners, who we support,” he told reporters. “And there have been responses from the U.S. and Japan that it’s not China’s business and that the declared policy of supporting the one-China principle doesn’t mean one has to ask Beijing for permission to visit Taiwan. Surely, it’s a weird logic.”

The talks in Cambodia came a day after WNBA star Brittney Griner was convicted of drug possession and sentenced to nine years in prison by Russia in a politicall­y charged case amid antagonism­s over the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Blinken said the conviction and sentence compound “the injustice that has been done to her.”

“It puts a spotlight on our very significan­t concern with Russia’s legal system and the Russian government’s use of wrongful detentions to advance its own agenda using individual­s as political pawns,” he said.

 ?? Johnson Lai Associated Press ?? TAIWANESE fighter jets taxi at a base in Hsinchu, Taiwan, on Friday as Chinese military drills continue.
Johnson Lai Associated Press TAIWANESE fighter jets taxi at a base in Hsinchu, Taiwan, on Friday as Chinese military drills continue.

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