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War With China ‘Neither Imminent nor Unavoidable,’ US Says

The US defence chief has told a security forum that Washington and Beijing must remain in dialogue amid Asia-Pacific tensions. China, for its part, says it sees the US as being the main challenge to peace in the region.
US President Joe Biden with Chinese President XI Jinping. Photo: X/@POTUS
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US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin on Saturday said a constant dialogue with China and its neighbours was needed to prevent an escalation of current tensions in the Asia-Pacific region, while underscoring Washington’s regional security commitment.

Austin’s comments at the Shangri-La Dialogue security forum in Singapore come as the US deepens defence ties with several Asian-Pacific countries in the face of growing territorial assertion by China.

The conference is taking place a week after China carried out military drills around the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own, as a “punishment” for comments seen as advocating separatism made in the inauguration speech of new Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te.

What did Austin say?

“Every conversation is not going to be a happy conversation. But it is important that we continue to talk to each other,” Austin told the conference, adding that “a war or a fight with China is neither imminent, in my view, or unavoidable.”

However, Austin did place great emphasis on Washington’s commitment to security in the region, reflected in a growing number of defence partnerships. 

He said there had been a “new convergence around nearly all aspects of security” in the Asia-Pacific over the past three years.

“This new convergence is producing a stronger, more resilient and more capable network of partnerships and that is defining a new era of security in the Indo-Pacific,” Austin told the forum.

“Let me be clear: The United States can be secure only if Asia is secure,” Austin said. “That’s why the United States has long maintained our presence in this region.”

“We are all in and we’re not going anywhere,” Austin said.

He also offered reassurance to several countries in the region that fear the wars in Ukraine and Gaza could be taking Washington’s attention.

“Despite these historic clashes in Europe and the Middle East, the Indo-Pacific has remained our priority theatre of operations,” Austin said in his speech.

How has China responded?

In response to Austin’s comments, Chinese Lieutenant General Jing Jianfeng accused the United States of seeking to build “an Asia-Pacific version of NATO.”

He went on to call the US the “greatest challenge to regional peace and stability.”

Jing, who is the deputy chief of the Joint Staff Department of China’s Central Military Commission, said the the US Indo-Pacific strategy was intended “to create division, provoke confrontation and undermine stability.”

“It only serves the selfish geopolitical interests of the US and runs counter to the trend of history and the shared aspirations of regional countries for peace, development and win-win cooperation,” Jing said.

Amid the US-Chinese friction, Austin met with his Chinese counterpart Dong Jun on Friday for the first substantive face-to-face talks between the two countries’ defence chiefs in 18 months.

This article was originally published on DW.

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