U.S. flexes muscles as Asia worries about
South China Sea row
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[June 04, 2016]
By David Brunnstrom and Greg Torode
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The United States
stepped up pressure on China on Saturday to rein in its actions in the
South China Sea, with top defense officials underlining Washington's
military superiority and vowing to remain the main guarantor of Asian
security for decades to come.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the U.S. approach to the
Asia-Pacific remained "one of commitment, strength and inclusion",
but he also warned China against provocative behavior in the South
China Sea.
Any action by China to reclaim land in the Scarborough Shoal, an
outcrop in the disputed sea, would have consequences, Carter said.
"I hope that this development doesn't occur, because it will result
in actions being taken by the both United States and ... by others
in the region which would have the effect of not only increasing
tensions but isolating China," Carter told the Shangri-La Dialogue,
a regional security forum in Singapore.
"The United States will remain the most powerful military and main
underwriter of security in the region for decades to come – and
there should be no doubt about that."
The top U.S. military commander in the region, Admiral Harry Harris,
told reporters at the forum that Washington needed to operate from a
position of strength against "all outcomes".
"The bottom line is this: we want to co-operate where we can, but we
just have to be ready as a military to confront them if we must," he
said.
The South China Sea has become a flashpoint between the United
States, which increased its focus on the Asia-Pacific under
President Barack Obama's "pivot", and China, which is projecting
ever greater economic, political and military power in the region.
Carter however said he would welcome China's participation in a
"principled security network" for Asia.
"Forward thinking statesmen and leaders must ... come together to
ensure a positive principled future," he said, adding that the
network he envisaged could also help protect against "Russia's
worrying actions" and the growing strategic impact of climate
change.
The deputy head of China's delegation to the forum said any attempts
by the United States to isolate China would fail.
"This is a time of cooperation and common security," Rear Admiral
Guan Youfei told reporters. "The U.S. action to take sides is not
agreed by many countries. We hope the U.S. will also listen to the
other countries."
REGIONAL WORRIES
Other Asian leaders said the situation in the South China Sea was
viewed with concern across the region.
"All countries in the region need to recognize that our shared
prosperities and the enviable rate of growth that this region enjoys
over past decades will be put at risk by aggressive behavior or
actions by any one of us," Indian Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar
told the forum.
Japanese Defence Minister Gen Nakatani said his country would help
Southeast Asian nations build their security capabilities to deal
with what he called unilateral, dangerous and coercive actions in
the South China Sea.
"In the South China Sea, we have been witnessing large-scale and
rapid land reclamation, building of outposts and utilization of them
for military purposes," Nakatani said. "No countries can be an
outsider of this issue."
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Secretary of Defense Ash Carter speaks at the IISS Shangri-La
Dialogue in Singapore June 4, 2016. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Trillions of dollars of trade a year passes through the South China
Sea, which is home to rich oil, gas and fishing resources. Besides
China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have
claims in the area, and rising tensions have been fuelling
increasing security spending in the region.
"The uncertainty of China's future trajectory is arguably the main
driving concern about possible military competition now and in the
future," Malaysian Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said.
Carter said that for decades some critics had been predicting an
impending U.S. withdrawal from the region, but this would not
happen.
"That’s because this region, which is home to nearly half the
world’s population and nearly half the global economy, remains the
most consequential for America’s own security and prosperity."
TRUMP COUNTER
In an apparent counter to "America-first" policies expounded by
prospective Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump,
including suggestions that U.S. troops should be withdrawn from
Asia, Carter stressed bipartisan support for continued engagement.
"Regardless of what else was going on at home or in other parts of
the world – during Democratic and Republican administrations, in
times of surplus and deficit, war and peace – the United States has
remained economically, politically, and militarily engaged, as well
as geographically located in the Asia-Pacific," he said.
The Shangri-La Dialogue is being held ahead of a significant ruling
expected in coming weeks on a case filed by the Philippines in the
International Court of Arbitration challenging China's South China
Sea claims, which Beijing has vowed to ignore.
The United States has been lobbying Asian and other countries to
back the judges' statement that their ruling must be binding, a call
echoed by Japan on Saturday.
China has lobbied on the other side for support for its position
that the court lacks jurisdiction in the case.
(Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia, Masayuki Kitano, Lee Chyen
Yee and Paige Lim; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Lincoln Feast)
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