US defence chief to visit China amid S China Sea tensions

Beijing US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, who has accused China of “intimidation and coercion” in the South China Sea, visits Beijing this week as the countries increasingly spar over US arms sales to Taiwan and Beijing’s expanding military presence overseas.

Mattis will be the first defense secretary in President Donald Trump’s administration to visit China. His trip highlights the need for the US and its chief rival in East Asia to engage each other despite increasingly stark differences and mutual suspicion.

 

Mattis’ mission comes at a difficult time as the Trump administration is set to start taxing USD 34 billion in Chinese goods in two weeks while Beijing has vowed to retaliate with its own tariffs on US products.

The US appears likely to rely on China for help getting North Korea to deliver on denuclearization promises made at this month’s summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The South China Sea will likely be near the top of the agenda in discussions between Mattis and Chinese officials, with the US issuing threats against Beijing for its continued militarization of the waters. “There are consequences that will continue to come home to roost, so to speak, with China if they don’t find a way to work more collaboratively with all of the nations who have interests,” Mattis said earlier this month.

He said China’s weapons were placed in the region for “intimidation and coercion.” The Pentagon last month withdrew its invitation for China to participate in a large-scale multinational naval exercise in what it called “an initial response” to the militarization of the South China Sea.

China was seen as taking home a major win when Trump announced at the summit with Kim that the US would suspend joint US-South Korean war games that North Korea and China have long opposed.

Both Mattis and South Korea were seen as caught off-guard by the decision. US and South Korean officials now see the pledge as helping advance nuclear negotiations with North Korea. China welcomed the move, and Kim met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week, though no new measures toward denuclearisation have been announced.

Trump said last week that “total denuclearisation” has “already started taking place.” Mattis, however, was asked whether he had seen any sign that North Korea had begun steps toward denuclearization and replied: “I’m not aware of any. Obviously, we’re at the very front end of the process.”

China’s complaints about US contacts with Taiwan have grown louder, with the US seeking to increase exchanges with the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its territory, and selling more weapons to it.

Mattis will likely hear those arguments made even more forcibly after Trump this year signed the Taiwan Travel Act encouraging high-level visits between the two sides, and the Department of Defense agreed to give American contractors marketing licenses for diesel-electric submarine technology sought by Taiwan’s armed forces.

The US government also approved a USD 1.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan last year, although in an effort to mollify Beijing, has been reluctant to supply everything the island’s leadership wants.

Trump’s announcement last week that he was directing the Pentagon to create a new “Space Force” drew attention in China and may be among the items for discussion in Beijing. Trump framed space as a national security issue, saying he does not want “China and Russia and other countries leading us.”

While the U.S. has dominated in space since its 1969 moon landing, China is making strong headway, while Russia is in decline. China says it opposes the militarization of outer space, but demonstrated its growing prowess in the field in 2007 when it fired a missile that destroyed a defunct Chinese satellite, creating an enormous debris field and drawing concerns from the US and others.

In addition to its increased presence in the South China Sea, China’s People’s Liberation Army is expanding its footprint in areas where the US and its allies have traditionally held sway. Most strikingly, China opened its first foreign military base in Djibouti last year, joining the US and a number of other countries with military installations in the Horn of Africa nation.

Operating in closer proximity has at times created friction – the US issued a formal complaint to Beijing over the use of lasers that targeted US aircraft in Djibouti on several occasions.

The US has also complained about dangerous maneuvers by Chinese military aircraft tailing US surveillance planes in the South and East China seas.

Department of Defense officials warned lawmakers last week that China and other countries were threatening America’s “technological and military dominance.” Michael D. Griffin, undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, told the House Armed Services Committee’s Military Personnel Subcommittee that China was stealing technology and intellectual property in a way that was “significant and intentional.

AP

Yelin Qiu

The Kootneeti Team - South China Sea Monitor

Subscribe to the International Relations Updates by The Kootneeti

* indicates required

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Kootneeti Team

Facebook Comments

The Kootneeti Team

This report has been written by The Kootneeti Team. For any feedbacks/query reach Editor@thekootneeti.com || Twitter: @TheKootneeti

You may also like...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *