Pompeo wraps up anti-China tour of Asia in Vietnam
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wrapped up a
five-nation, anti-China tour of Asia in Vietnam on Friday with a call for
regional unity to counter Beijing's growing assertiveness, as the fierce
American presidential election race entered its final stretch.
With just four days left in the campaign in which
China has been a central theme, Pompeo visited Hanoi ostensibly to celebrate 25
years of U.S.-Vietnam relations. But, as he has at his previous stops in India,
Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia, Pompeo’s main aim was to shore up
support for pushing back on China.
“We have enormous respect for the Vietnamese people
and your country’s sovereignty," Pompeo told Vietnamese Prime Minister
Nguyen Xuan Phuc.
In brief comments heard by reporters, neither man
mentioned China by name, but Pompeo's use of the word “sovereignty” has become
code for referring to opposition to Chinese encroachment, particularly in Asia.
“We look forward to continuing to work together to
build on our relationship and to make the region — throughout Southeast Asia,
Asia and the Indo-Pacific — safe and peaceful and prosperous," Pompeo
said.
Phuc said he seeks “sincere cooperation” between
both sides in support of a peaceful region.
The Trump administration has made confronting China,
its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, human rights record and
aggressiveness toward its smaller neighbors one of its main foreign policy
priorities. Those issues, particularly the Chinese origin of the virus, have
been highlighted by President Donald Trump as he seeks to beat back a stiff
reelection challenge from former Vice President Joe Biden in the Nov. 3 polls.
Trump has sought to paint Biden as weak on China and
beholden to it, repeatedly raising questions about alleged connections between
Biden's son, Hunter, and Chinese businesses.
Amid concerns about the spread of COVID-19, Vietnam
was a late addition to Pompeo’s itinerary and has numerous fears about Chinese
policies in the region. Those range from Beijing's territorial and maritime
claims in the South China Sea to its development activities along the Mekong
River, which runs through much of mainland Southeast Asia and is a regional
lifeline.
In a statement released ahead of Pompeo's arrival in
Vietnam, the State Department attacked China for reneging on cooperation
pledges with other Mekong countries and for aggressively pursuing suspect
claims in the South China Sea.
China's “malign and destabilizing actions in the
Mekong region, including manipulation of Mekong River water flows, negatively
affect millions of people who depend on the river for their livelihoods,"
it said.
“The United States stands with our Indo-Pacific
allies and partners in protecting their sovereign rights to offshore resources
in the South China Sea, consistent with their rights and obligations under
international law,” it said. It noted that earlier this year, Pompeo had
rejected outright nearly all of Beijing’s sweeping claims in the South China
Sea, including those involving Vietnam.
China’s actions in the South China Sea, through
which a third of global shipping passes, has drawn rebuke from the United
States and become a flashpoint for a region in which Southeast Asian neighbors
Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan all have rival claims.
China has ignored an arbitration ruling won by the
Philippines that invalidated most of Beijing's claims, and built military
outposts on seven man-made islands.
Pompeo arrived in Vietnam from Indonesia, where he
praised Indonesian leadership in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations for
pushing back on what he called China’s “unlawful” South China Sea claims and
denounced Beijing for its treatment of religious minorities, calling it “the
gravest threat to the future of religious freedom.”
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin
defended Beijing's policies toward religious minorities and accused Pompeo of
acting out of “ideological prejudice and selfish political interests."
“We urge Pompeo to stop fabricating all kinds of
lies about China and stop using the religious issue to interfere in China’s
internal affairs," Wang told reporters at a daily briefing on Friday.
While China's constitution technically protects
freedom of religion, the officially atheist Communist Party strictly limits
observance, especially among young people and those worshiping outside
party-sanctioned religious bodies.
Pompeo had traveled to Indonesia from the Maldives,
Sri Lanka and India on stops where he steadily ratcheted up the pressure on
Beijing, which has rejected U.S. concerns and accused him and others in the
Trump administration of fanning the flames of a new Cold War.
In the Maldives, Pompeo announced the United States
would for the first time open an embassy in the Indian Ocean archipelago, a
move that reflects growing U.S. concern about increasing Chinese influence and
what he he called “its lawless and threatening behavior” in the Indo-Pacific
region.
Just hours earlier in Sri Lanka, Pompeo had accusing
China of being a ”predator” in smaller countries by exploiting them with loans
and development projects intended to benefit the Chinese more than the intended
recipients.
At his first stop of the tour in India, Pompeo and
Defense Secretary Mark Esper had stepped up the administration’s anti-China
message by playing on Indian suspicions about the Chinese to shore up a
regional front against Beijing in the Indo-Pacific.
Just hours before the meetings in New Delhi began,
the Trump administration notified Congress of plans for a $2.37 billion sale of
Harpoon missile systems to Taiwan — the second major arms sale in two weeks to
the democratic island that Beijing regards as a renegade province. China
angrily reacted by announcing sanctions on U.S. defense contractors.



