The Capital

Biden hails upgraded Vietnam ties

Sees shared concern over China, says US ‘not going anywhere’

- By Katie Rogers

HANOI, Vietnam — President Joe Biden hailed an upgrade in the U.S.-Vietnam relationsh­ip on Sunday, the latest step in Washington’s efforts to enhance its strategic links with Southeast Asian nations that act as a bulwark against rising Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific region.

Speaking at a news conference in the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, on Sunday evening local time, the president said the United States had “strengthen­ed our ties with another critical Indo-Pacific partner,” after Vietnam officially confirmed it would elevate its relationsh­ip with Washington to the top level of the country’s three-tier hierarchy for bilateral relations.

Biden added that the United States is “a Pacific nation, and we’re not going anywhere,” a statement that appeared intended to put China on notice.

The news conference came after Biden met with Nguyen Phu Trong, the general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam, at the party headquarte­rs in Hanoi. The general secretary, speaking through a translator, welcomed Biden and talked about how their meeting would be an important chance to improve cooperatio­n.

“Vietnam is a friend, a reliable partner and a responsibl­e member of the internatio­nal community,” Biden said at the meeting.

Human rights activists have accused the U.S. government of casting aside its professed commitment to promoting democracy and human rights abroad in favor of shoring up U.S. dominance in the region. Vietnam continues to be one of the most authoritar­ian countries in Southeast Asia, and Trong’s government has waged an especially harsh crackdown on dissent and activism in recent years.

Some tension over Vietnam’s track record on human rights was detectable: Although Biden mentioned he brought up the issue, Trong stressed the importance of “noninterfe­rence in domestic affairs.”

Vietnam is among the few Southeast Asian nations that have publicly pushed back against China’s assertiven­ess in the South China

Sea, and a statement from its Central Foreign Affairs Committee said Trong had told Biden that his country “highly appreciate­s” U.S. support for the interests of Vietnam and the rest of Southeast Asia there.

At the news conference, which took place about 90 minutes later than expected, several questions from reporters centered on America’s relationsh­ip with China, including accusation­s by Beijing that the United States has a “Cold War” mentality amid recent investment restrictio­ns and heightened tensions over technology access.

“I don’t want to contain China,” Biden said. “I just want to make sure that we have a relationsh­ip with China that is on the up-and-up and squared away.”

He added that he had not spoken to President Xi Jinping of China in months, saying that Xi was busy dealing with domestic issues.

“Look, this is not a criticism,” he said. “It’s an observatio­n. He has his hands full right now.”

During his remarks, Biden twice referred to the “Third

World” in his answers, verbiage that many people in developing countries consider offensive. The first time, he quickly corrected himself to say he was referring to the “Global South” and in the second instance, he said “the southern hemisphere.”

Biden traveled to Hanoi on Sunday from India, where he had been attending the Group of 20 summit in New Delhi. At the meeting, he and other leaders of the group issued a declaratio­n that omitted any condemnati­on of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine or its brutal conduct of the war, instead lamenting the “suffering” of the Ukrainian people.

G20 leaders paid their respects to Indian independen­ce leader Mohandas Gandhi as their summit came to a close Sunday, a day after the group added a new member and reached agreement on a range of issues but softened language on Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The Group of 20 rich and developing nations welcomed the African Union as a member — part of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s drive to uplift the Global South. Host India was also able to get the disparate group to sign off on a final statement despite pointed disagreeme­nts among powerful members, mostly centered on the European conflict.

India also unveiled an ambitious plan with the United States, the European Union and others to build a rail and shipping corridor linking it with the Middle East and Europe in a bid to strengthen economic growth and political cooperatio­n.

With those major agenda items taken care of, the leaders shook hands Sunday and posed for photos with Modi at the Rajghat memorial site in New Delhi. Each received a shawl made of khadi, a handspun fabric that was promoted by Gandhi during India’s independen­ce movement against the British.

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took over the G20 rotating presidency at the summit’s end. He hopes to rebuild Brazil’s standing after a period of internatio­nal isolation under far-right former leader Jair Bolsonaro.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES
KENNY HOLSTON/ ?? President Biden speaks during a meeting with Vietnam leader Nguyen Phu Trong (not pictured), Sunday.
THE NEW YORK TIMES KENNY HOLSTON/ President Biden speaks during a meeting with Vietnam leader Nguyen Phu Trong (not pictured), Sunday.

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