Rivalry with China in Pacific need not lead to new Cold War, says U.S.
security advisor
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[November 11, 2021]
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The "stiff competition"
between the United States and China in the Indo-Pacific does not have to
turn into a new Cold War, U.S. national security advisor Jake Sullivan
said on Thursday, describing the United States as "doubling down" on its
presence in the region.
Earlier on Thursday China's President Xi Jinping said the Asia Pacific
region must not return to the tensions of the Cold War era, and warned
against forming small circles on geopolitical grounds.
In a speech delivered via videolink to Australia's Lowy Institute,
Sullivan said the United States had quit Afghanistan to put more
emphasis on the Indo Pacific where it wanted to minimise the potential
for conflict.
Responding to questions, Sullivan sought to downplay fears about the
risk of a new Cold War developing with China.
"All of this talk of the United States and China going into a new cold
war and we are on our way to conflict... we have the choice not to do
that," Sullivan said.
"We have the choice instead to move forward with what President Biden
says is stiff competition, where we are going to compete vigorously
across multiple dimensions, including economics and technology, where we
are going to stand up for our values, but we also recognise China is
going to be a factor in the international system for the forseeable
future."
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White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan takes questions
during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S., June
7, 2021. REUTERS/Leah Millis//File Photo
A U.S. strategy to build a "latticework of alliances"
globally led it to form the Aukus pact with Australia and Britain to
share nuclear submarine technology; work with the Quad democracies
of Australia, India and Japan to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to the
region; and form a U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council to push back
against China on emerging technology, he said.
While the Aukus deal showed the more intensive engagement in the
Indo Pacific, this didn't mean the U.S. was turning its back on
other regions of the world, particularly Europe, Sullivan said.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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