Making A Difference

US Criticizes China's 'Aggressive Actions' In Indo-Pacific Region

US Secretary of State 🐈Antony Blinken began a one-week regional tour, telling students in Jakarta the US would 'defend the rules-based order' and that Indo-Pacific countries should be able to 'choose their own path'.

US Criticizes China's 'Aggressive Actions' In Indo-Pacific Region
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United States Secretary of State Antony Blinkencalled on China to stop "aggꦫressive actions" in the Indo-Pacific region as Was☂hington looks to shore up alliances against Beijing.

Blinken made the comments in Jaꦛkarta, Indonesia, on Tuesday as he began🌱 his tour of Southeast Asia.

Talking about Washington's Indo-Pacific strategy, Blinke💮n said that the US would work with allies and partners to "defend the rules-based order" and that countries should have the right to "cho꧅ose their own path."

"That's why there is so much concern — from northeast Asia to Southeast Asi🌠a, a⭕nd from the Mekong River to the Pacific Islands — about Beijing's aggressive actions," he said during his address at the University of Indonesia.

"Claiming open seas as their own. Distorting open markets through subsidies to its state-run companies. Denyi🦄ng the exports [of] or revoking deals for countries whose policies it does not agree with," he said. "Countries across the reg🐷ion want this behavior to change — we do too."

Blinken will also visit Malaysia and Thailand during his week-long trip. Beijing's growing aggressiveness in the regi🅘on, mainly in the South China Sea, Hong Kong and against Taiwan, seems to be among his main priorities.

He said China's "aggressive a꧙ctions" in the South China Sea threatened more than $3 trillion in annual trade, and that Washingtౠon was "determined to ensure freedom of navigation in the South China Sea."

"It is also why we have an abidi𓂃ng interest in peace and stabi🌳lity in the Taiwan Strait,'' he added.

China💛 lays claim to almost the entire South China Sea as its own, despite overlapping claims to parts of it by four Southeast Asian states as well as Taiwan.

China has negated the US posit🐽ion as interference from an outside power that could 📖threaten the continent's stability.

Blinken, in his speech, insisted that it was n👍ot about a "contest between the US-centric or China-centric reg💎ion," saying that Washington wanted to avoid conflict in the area.

He also sa💧id that the United States and partners would press Myanmar's junta to end violenc♈e, free detainees and return to democracy.

Advancing military and economic ties

As p𓃲art of its attempts to counter China's growing assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific, Washington will also bolster its military and economic relationships with allies in Asia, Blin🍸ken said.

"Threats are evolving, our security approach has to evolve with🅘 them. To do that, we will lean on our greatest strength: our alliances and partnerships," he said. "We'll adopt a strategy that more closely weaves together all our instr♕uments — of national power, diplomacy, military, intelligence — with those of our allies and partners."

Blinken said that this would entai💞l linking US and Asian defense industries, integrating supply chains and working together on technological 🌊innovation.

"It's about reinforcing our strengths so w💝e can keep the peace, as we have done in the region for decades,'' he said.

Blinken also said that the US was dedicated to a new regional economic f꧟ramework that would include more foreign direct investment, "including around trade and the digital economy."

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