Speaking remotely to foreign ministers of the 10-member
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo said the region should be confident in the
United States and know it can bank on its support.
"Today, I say keep going. Don't just speak up but act," Pompeo
said. "Reconsider business dealings with the very state-owned
enterprises that bully ASEAN coastal states in the South China
Sea. Don't let the Chinese Communist Party walk over us and our
people."
ASEAN has said it does not want to take sides amid friction over
a recent spike in military activities by both powers in the
South China Sea and ahead of a November election in which U.S.
President Donald Trump will trumpet his tough stand against
China.
Asked about China-U.S. tensions on Tuesday in an interview with
Reuters, Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi said: "We
don't want to get trapped by this rivalry."
China's State Councillor Wang Yi on Wednesday told the ASEAN
ministers that the United States was interfering in the South
China Sea and was driving its militarization.
China says it has historical sovereignty over most of the
waterway, but its neighbors and the United States say that claim
has no basis in international law.
Pompeo's swipe at Chinese firms follows Washington's recent
announcement of sanctions on 24 Chinese entities involved in
building artificial islands in disputed waters and installing
missile systems on them.
U.S. ally the Philippines is among countries where blacklisted
firms have secured lucrative contracts, but its president says
those will go ahead.
ASEAN ministers held remote meetings on Thursday with Japan and
also Australia.
Foreign Minister Marise Payne said Australia was committed to a
peaceful Indo-Pacific "free from coercion and with sovereignty,
international law and the rights of all states respected and
upheld."
Vietnam Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh in a statement welcomed
the U.S. role in supporting ASEAN's hope for peace, stability,
security and freedom of navigation.
(Additional reporting by Khanh Vu and James Pearson; Writing by
Martin Petty; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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