BANGKOK — U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris met briefly with Chinese President Xi Jinping Saturday on the sidelines of the of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Bangkok.
“The Vice President noted a key message that President [Joe] Biden emphasized in his November 14 meeting with President Xi: we must maintain open lines of communication to responsibly manage the competition between our countries,” a White House official said.
The message may run counter to her visit to the Philippine island of Palawan Tuesday, which Beijing would likely see as a rebuke. The Palawan island chain in the South China Sea, just 330 km east of the Spratly Islands is claimed entirely by China and partly by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.
Harris will be the highest-ranking American official to visit Palawan.
While many in the region fear an invasion of Taiwan, Chinese militarization is most acutely felt in the disputed waters of the South China Sea. Since 2013, China has engaged in unprecedented dredging and artificial island-building in the waters, creating 1,295 hectares of new land in the Spratlys, according to the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative. China, Taiwan and Vietnam each claim all of the Spratlys, while some of the chain s claimed by Malaysia and the Philippines. Brunei claims an exclusive economic zone over the Spratlys.
Trillions of dollars’ worth, or approximately one-third of, global maritime trade passes through the strategic waters of the South China Sea every year. Harris will engage with locals in the fishing community in Palawan and emphasize “U.S. commitment to freedom of navigation,” a senior White House official told VOA during a Friday briefing with reporters.
The official said Harris will also underscore “the consequences of illegal unregulated and unreported fishing.” Known as its acronym, IUU is a big problem for regional countries with China listed as the worst offender, according to the latest IUU Fishing Index which maps illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing in 152 coastal countries.
In May the U.S. launched a maritime initiative aimed at monitoring territorial waters, called the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness, during Biden’s Tokyo summit with leaders of Japan, India and Australia — the group known as the Quad. The four countries’ informal grouping is seen as a counter to China.
Source: VOA News, Patsy Widakuswara
Photo credit: APEC 2022 Thailand Twitter