Trump in strategy document to cite China,
Russia as competitors
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[December 18, 2017]
By Steve Holland and Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump will declare that China and Russia are competitors seeking to
challenge U.S. power and erode its security and prosperity, in a
national security strategy he will lay out in a speech on Monday.
"They are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow
their militaries, and to control information and data to repress their
societies and expand their influence," according to excerpts of Trump's
strategy released by the White House.
The strategy, a product of months of deliberations by the president and
his top advisers, does not repeat former President Barack Obama's 2016
description of climate change as a U.S. national security threat, aides
said.
Trump has vowed to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate
accord unless changes are made to it. "The United States will continue
to advance an approach that balances energy security, economic
development, and environmental protection," the document will say.
Trump's national security posture reflects his "America First"
priorities of protecting the U.S. homeland and borders, rebuilding the
U.S. military, projecting strength abroad and pursuing trade policies
more favorable to the United States.
The singling out of China and Russia as "revisionist powers" in the
document reflects the Trump administration's wariness of them despite
Trump's own attempts to build strong relations with Chinese President Xi
Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A senior administration official who briefed reporters said Russia and
China were attempting to revise the global status quo - Russia in Europe
with its military incursions into Ukraine and Georgia, and China in Asia
by its aggression in the South China Sea.
The strategy will pledge to protect critical U.S. infrastructure from
cyber hacking and vow to "go after malicious cyber actors." Both China
and Russia are often accused of cyber attacks against U.S. targets,
allegations they deny.
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President Donald Trump casts a shadow as he waves and approaches the
press to make remarks as he returns from a weekend at the
presidential retreat at Camp David to the White House, Washington,
U.S., December17, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Theiler
Trump has been working with Xi to exert pressure on North Korea over its
nuclear and ballistic missile programs, but has made little progress on
his vow to negotiate terms more favorable to the United States to lower
a trade deficit that reached $347 billion in 2016.
On Sunday, Putin called Trump to thank him for providing U.S.
intelligence that helped thwart a potentially deadly bomb attack in
St. Petersburg, Russia.
U.S. intelligence agencies blame Russia for meddling in the 2016
presidential election campaign and there is a U.S. investigation
into whether there was collusion between Trump campaign aides and
Russians. Russia denies interfering in the election and Trump has
denied any collusion took place.
'FALSE PREMISE'
The document will say, according to the excerpts, that competition
with China and Russia requires Washington to rethink policies based
on the assumption that engagement with rivals and including them in
international institutions "would turn them into benign actors and
trustworthy partners."
"For the most part, this premise turned out to be false," the
document says.The strategy will also cite North Korea, Iran and
Islamist militant groups as threats to U.S. interests and will
single out Pyongyang for seeking biowarfare.
"As missiles grow in numbers, types, and effectiveness, to include
those with greater ranges, they are the most likely means for states
like North Korea to use a nuclear weapon against the United States.
North Korea is also pursuing chemical and biological weapons which
could also be delivered by missile," the document will say.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Phil Stewart; Editing by Peter
Cooney)
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