Biden and Japan's Suga project unity against China's assertiveness
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[April 17, 2021]
By Trevor Hunnicutt, David Brunnstrom and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden
on Friday sought to present a united front with Japanese Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga to counter an increasingly assertive China as the U.S.
leader held his first face-to-face White House summit since taking
office.
The talks offered the Democratic president, inaugurated in January, a
chance to work further on his pledge to revitalize U.S. alliances that
frayed under his Republican predecessor Donald Trump.
China topped the agenda, underscoring Japan's central role in U.S.
efforts to face down Beijing. The two leaders addressed an array of
geopolitical issues in a joint statement, including "the importance of
peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait," a slap at Beijing's increased
military pressure on the Chinese-claimed, self-ruled island.
"Today Prime Minister Suga and I affirmed our ironclad support for the
U.S.-Japanese alliance and for our shared security," Biden told a joint
news conference in the White House Rose Garden, calling the discussions
"productive."
"We committed to working together to take on the challenges from China
and on issues like the East China Sea, the South China Sea, as well as
North Korea, to ensure a future of a free and open Indo Pacific."
Other pressing concerns at the talks included China's increased military
movements near Taiwan, its tightening grip on Hong Kong and its
crackdown on Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang.
Suga said he and Biden agreed on the necessity of frank discussions with
China in the context of Beijing's activities in the Indo-Pacific region.
In a strongly worded statement on Saturday, China's embassy in
Washington said Beijing was "resolutely opposed" to the joint statement,
and that Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang were China's internal affairs.
The remarks have "completely gone beyond the scope of the normal
development of bilateral relations", harming the interests of third
parties as well as peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific, the embassy
said.
The move was an attempt to split the region that "will inevitably
proceed with the purpose of harming others and end in harming
themselves", it added.
The summit - Biden's first in-person meeting with a foreign leader as
president - came just days after China sent 25 aircraft, including
fighters and nuclear-capable bombers, near Taiwan, which Beijing
considers a wayward province.
"I refrain from mentioning details, since it pertains to diplomatic
exchanges, but there is already an agreed recognition over the
importance of peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait between Japan and
the United States, which was reaffirmed on this occasion," Suga said.
The joint leaders' statement included the first reference to Taiwan
since 1969, before Tokyo normalized ties with Beijing, using similar
phrasing by the foreign and defense ministers of both countries after a
meeting last month.
Attention had been focused on the wording on Taiwan and other sensitive
issues, given caution in Tokyo about the need to balance its security
concerns with Japan's deep economic ties with China.
DIGITAL COMPETITIVENESS, HUMAN RIGHTS
Taiwan’s government welcomed the show of support, and called on China to
act responsibly.
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Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and U.S. President Joe Biden
hold a joint news conference in the Rose Garden at the White House
in Washington, U.S., April 16, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
"We hope the Beijing authorities will fulfill their
responsibilities as part of the Taiwan Strait and region and jointly
make positive contributions to stability and well being,”
presidential office spokesman Xavier Chang said in a statement.
In another swipe at China, Biden told the news
conference the United States and Japan will invest together in areas
such as 5G, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, genomics and
semiconductor supply chains.
The joint statement said the United States had committed $2.5
billion and Japan $2 billion to strengthen digital competitiveness
including in 5G and beyond 5G networks.
"Japan and the United States are both deeply invested in innovation
and looking to the future," Biden said. "That includes making sure
we invest in and protect technologies that will maintain and sharpen
our competitive edge."
Speaking later to a Washington think tank, Suga said Japan would say
what is needed to be said to China and speak up on human rights,
while also stressing the need to establish a stable, constructive
relationship with Beijing.
The leaders' statement said they "share serious concerns" about the
human rights situation in Hong Kong and China's Xinjiang region,
where Washington has said Beijing is perpetrating a genocide against
Muslim Uighurs. China has denied abuses.
Japan has been criticized for not taking stronger action on alleged
human rights abuses for fear of a backlash that could hurt its firms
with business in China, its biggest trade partner.
At the White House news conference, Suga said he told Biden that he
was committed to moving forward with the summer Olympic Games in
Japan and that Biden offered his support. Japan is grappling with
rising coronavirus infections with fewer than 100 days until the
planned start.
"I told the president about my determination to realize the Tokyo
Olympic and Paralympic games this summer as a symbol of global
unity," Suga said.
As they sat down for talks, Biden, Suga and their two delegations
all wore masks, in keeping with protocols to protect against the
spread of COVID-19.
Biden appeared determined to get off on the right foot with Suga
after four years in which Trump sometimes chastised allies in Asia
and elsewhere over what he saw as insufficient defense spending or
funding for U.S. troop presence and questioned the value of bedrock
military alliances.
With the Suga meeting and another planned summit with South Korea in
May, Biden hopes to energize joint efforts with Australia, India and
Japan in a grouping known as the Quad, as well as with South Korea,
to counter China and longtime U.S. foe North Korea.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom and Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional
reporting by Nandita Bose, Chizu Nomiyama, Steve Holland, Linda Sieg,
Kiyoshi Takenaka, Ben Blanchard and Dominique Patton; Writing by
Matt Spetalnick, David Brunnstrom and Linda Sieg; Editing by Kieran
Murray, Will Dunham, Alistair Bell, Daniel Wallis and Lincoln
Feast.)
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