Pompeo slams China's 'corruption, coercion' at Tokyo talks
US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on key Asian allies to unite against
China's "exploitation, corruption and coercion" in the region, as he
held talks Tuesday in Tokyo.
Pompeo
was speaking at the start of discussions with his Japanese, Indian and
Australian counterparts -- the so-called Quad grouping, seeking to present a
united front against an increasingly assertive Beijing.
But
it was the top US diplomat who took the hardest line on China, referring to the
"pandemic that came from Wuhan", which he said was "made
infinitely worse by the Chinese Communist Party's cover-up".
He
warned it was "more critical now than ever that we collaborate to protect
our people and partners from the CCP's exploitation, corruption and coercion",
citing China's actions in the Himalayas, Taiwan Strait and elsewhere.
This
rhetoric was not fully echoed by Washington's partners in the grouping,
although Australia's Foreign Minister Marise Payne pointedly spoke of the
desire for a region "governed by rules, not power".
The
talks come with Washington, Sydney and New Delhi all at loggerheads with
Beijing.
Indian
Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar noted the fact that the meeting was
happening at all, given the coronavirus pandemic, was "testimony to the
importance" of the alliance.
But
Japan, under the leadership of new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, is seeking to
balance the need to support its allies with its desire to continue gradually
improving ties with China.
Foreign
Minister Toshimitsu Motegi notably did not mention China in his remarks, and
the government has said the talks are not directed at any one country.
"Lately, the present international
order has been challenged in various fields and the new coronavirus is
accelerating the trend," Motegi said at the start of the meeting.
"Our four countries share the
objective of strengthening a free and open, rule-based international order."
Pompeo's
visit, which included bilateral talks with his counterparts as well as a
meeting with Suga, took place despite the coronavirus crisis in Washington,
where President Donald Trump and several staff and advisors have tested
positive.
Although
planned stops in South Korea and Mongolia were scrapped, Pompeo said it was
important to go ahead with the four-way talks in Tokyo, promising
"significant announcements".
However,
no joint statement or press conference is expected after the meeting.
Pompeo
is a vociferous critic of China on issues from security to human rights to the
pandemic, which Trump's administration has sought to blame squarely on Beijing
ahead of the US election next month.
He
is the first senior American official to visit Japan since Suga took office
last month, and he said he was confident Tokyo and Washington were on the same
page.
Earlier
Tuesday, Suga said the spread of the coronavirus had shown "exactly why
right now is the time that we must further deepen coordination with as many
countries as possible that share our vision".
But
he too avoided any specific mention of Beijing, which has made clear its
disdain for the grouping, and last week urged countries to avoid "closed
and exclusive 'cliques'".
"We hope the relevant countries can
proceed from the common interests of countries in the region, and do more
things that are conducive to regional peace, stability and development, not the
other way around," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said.
The
Quad grouping was heavily promoted by Japan's former prime minister Shinzo Abe
as a way for the region's major democracies to step up cooperation in the face
of military and other threats posed by China.
The
first Quad meeting took place in New York last year, and there are moves to
make the gathering an annual event.



