By Clement Tan | June 2, 2024 | The Straits Times
SINGAPORE – The United States wants to meld its strategic alliances and partnerships in Asia into a “new convergence” based on the rule of law – a commitment that its defence chief said will continue regardless of the outcome of the presidential election in November.
Mr Lloyd Austin evoked “a future of fresh and growing partnerships” in a speech at the Shangri-La Dialogue on June 1, which immediately elicited a question from a Chinese military delegate on whether the US was planning to build “a Nato-like system in the Asia-Pacific region”.
In response, the US Secretary of Defence described it as a strengthening of relationships with allies and partners based on a common vision and common values.
He also emphatically rejected the Chinese delegate’s suggestion that Nato’s eastern expansion was responsible for the war in Ukraine, eliciting applause from many in the audience.
With China and the US competing for influence in the Asia-Pacific, Mr Austin said that Washington remains focused on the region, even as other flashpoints in the world such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the crisis in Gaza compete for attention.
“Despite these historic clashes in Europe and the Middle East, the Indo-Pacific has remained our priority theatre of operations,” he said.
“The actions that we take together here will continue shaping the 21st century for the entire world. And safeguarding the security and prosperity of this region remains the core organising principle of US national security policy.”
This will continue, whoever occupies the White House after the election, he added.
Mr Austin declared: “The United States can be secure only if Asia is, and that’s why the United States has long maintained its presence in this region.”
He told the security conference that “today we are witnessing a new convergence around nearly all aspects of security in the Indo-Pacific”.
“This new convergence is producing a stronger, more resilient, and more capable network of partnerships,” he added. “It isn’t about imposing one country’s will; it’s about summoning our sense of common purpose.”
He pointed to the US partnerships with Japan and India in defence technology, the Aukus defence technology transfer partnership with Australia and the United Kingdom, and the help given to South-east Asian nations in technology and training to uphold freedom of navigation in their waters.
“We’re also investing with Asean in training and educational opportunities for the future defence leaders of South-east Asia,” he said.
“It isn’t about bullying or coercion; it’s about the free choices of sovereign states. And it’s about nations of goodwill uniting around the interests that we share and the values that we cherish,” added Mr Austin, without making overt references to China in his prepared comments.
He said that common beliefs include a respect for sovereignty and international law, the free flow of commerce and ideas, freedom of the seas and skies, and the peaceful resolution of disputes through dialogue – “not coercion or conflict, and certainly not through so-called punishment”.
It was a clear allusion to the military drills that China launched on May 23 in the Taiwan Strait as a “punishment” and warning to Taiwan’s newly inaugurated President Lai Ching-te, whom Beijing regards as a “dangerous separatist”.
Beijing has never ceded its claim over Taiwan, which has been self-governing since the Chinese Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang, fled to the island from the mainland following its defeat in the Chinese Civil War in 1949.
In the South China Sea, there have been dangerous skirmishes between Chinese and Filipino coast guard vessels. The US is bound by treaty to come to the Philippines’ support in the event of an attack.
China, meanwhile, views the warming ties between the US and some Asia-Pacific nations as a threat and part of an attempt to build an alliance, similar to Nato, to encircle it. The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation was a peacetime military alliance established in 1949 to provide collective security against the threat posed by the former Soviet Union.
In his remarks, Mr Austin struck a mollifying tone when asked about the strategic competition between the US and China.
“What we have, frankly, in our relationship with China is a relationship based on competition. We’re not looking for a contentious relationship,” he said in response to an audience question. “A fight with China is neither imminent nor unavoidable.”
He earlier met his Chinese counterpart for the first time in 18 months on the sidelines of the 2024 forum on May 31, after being rebuffed by Admiral Dong Jun’s predecessor at the 2023 dialogue.
Communication between the two powers was suspended after former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in 2022 and a Chinese spy balloon was found floating over parts of the US in early 2023. The lack of dialogue sparked global worries that an accidental miscalculation might spark a bigger conflict.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen have made multiple working visits to China since the US and China resumed dialogue in late 2023, culminating in a meeting between US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco in November 2023.
“The key issue here is that we’re talking,” Mr Austin said in response to an audience question. “And I told (Admiral) Dong that if he calls me on an urgent matter, I will answer the phone, and I hope he will do the same.”
This story was first published at StraitsTimes.com.