Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Japan, US showcase alliance, resolve in dealing with China

- By Ellen Knickmeyer, Mari Yamaguchi and Aamer Madhani

>> President Joe Biden and Japan Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga showcased the alliance between their two countries as well as their shared resolve in dealing with China as they met at the White House on Friday in Biden’s first face-to-face talks with a foreign leader as president.

The talks featured unusually frank warnings from a Japanese leader against any effort by China to dominate the Indo-Pacific region by “force or coercion.” Suga said the visit was meant to “reaffirm the new and tight bond between us” as the U.S. and Japan deal with challenges in the region.

Suga and Biden, who wore masks for their meeting in a visit modified by precaution­s against the coronaviru­s, were seeking to challenge messaging from Chinese President Xi Jinping that America and democracie­s in general are on the decline following the political turmoil and internatio­nal withdrawal that marked Donald Trump’s presidency.

In a news conference afterward in the Rose Garden, Suga made repeated references to the “severe security environmen­t” in East Asia, where China under Xi is exerting its economic and military strength, including with military deployment­s meant to assert its disputed territoria­l claims in the region.

Suga broke from past Japanese leaders on Friday by not veiling his comments about China, an important economic partner for Japan. The prime minister said he and Biden held “serious talks on China’s influence over the peace and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific. We oppose any attempt to change the status quo by force or coercion.”

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had warned his Japanese counterpar­t in a call ahead of Suga’s visit to see to it that China-Japan relations “do not get involved in the so-called confrontat­ion between major countries,” according to a Chinese government readout.

The Biden administra­tion calls managing U.S. policies toward China and the Indo-Pacific the primary challenge for the United States. That helped guide Biden’s decision, announced this week, to pull U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n and free the administra­tion to focus more on East Asia.

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