U.S. pull-out from
Pacific trade deal hurts confidence, Singapore PM tells
BBC
Send a link to a friend
[March 01, 2017]
SINGAPORE
(Reuters) - The United States' pull-out from the Trans Pacific
Partnership hurt confidence in American policies, Singapore's Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong said, urging Washington to "focus" on its
relationship with China.
In an interview with the BBC broadcast on Wednesday, Lee said Singapore
was disappointed with President Donald Trump's decision to fulfill a
campaign pledge and withdraw the United States from the long-negotiated
12-country trade deal.
Singapore placed great strategic importance on the TPP as the wealthy
city-state views U.S. involvement in the region as key to its economic
growth and security. The deal was a pillar of former President Barack
Obama's pivot to Asia.
"I think this has put a dent in the degree to which people can be
confident of America's policies," Lee said. "But it has happened and we
have to live with it."
Singapore was ready to sign a "12 minus one" pact without the United
States, Lee added, although he was not sure that was on the cards, since
other countries, and Japan in particular, had made concessions in
exchange for U.S. givebacks.
With U.S. concessions off the table, "the political balance and economic
balance has shifted," Lee said.
Lee urged Washington to "focus" on its relationship with China for the
benefit of the region.
"If America-China relations become very difficult, our position becomes
tougher, because then we will be coerced to choose between being friends
with America and friends with China ... and that's a real worry," Lee
said.
[to top of second column] |
Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong speaks at the
International Conference on The Future of Asia in Tokyo, Japan,
September 29, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"Right
now we're friends with both, not that we don't have issues with either, but
we're generally friends with both, and the relationships are in good working
order," he added.
"Unless you focus on this relationship, both the win-win aspects as well as the
areas where you're in contention, it can go wrong."
Singapore has enhanced long-standing security ties with Washington in recent
years, and now hosts revolving deployments of vessels and P-8 surveillance
planes that regional military sources say routinely target Chinese submarines.
While Singapore is not a formal U.S. alliance partner, regional diplomats say it
has become Washington's most important military relationship in Southeast Asia,
more so since Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's election win last year.
The issue of nine armored cars seized by Hong Kong customs in November and
released in January was a "delicate" matter for both China and Singapore, Lee
added.
The vehicles were impounded on their way home from military exercises in Taiwan,
which Beijing sees as a breakaway province, and the incident fueled diplomatic
tension.
But both sides "handled it carefully" and the outcome was "satisfactory," Lee
said.
(Reporting by Marius Zaharia and Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |