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The Washington Post-US and Chinese defense chiefs hold first meeting since 2022

May 31, 2024   3 min   611 words

这篇报道主要内容是中美两国国防部长在新加坡举行的香格里拉对话会上会晤,这是自2022年以来的首次面对面会谈。美国寻求稳定与中国的关系,避免在亚洲出现危机。报道重点提到了南中国海问题和台湾问题,以及北京在这两个地区日益增长的军事活动。此外,报道还提到北京与柬埔寨深厚的经济和安全关系,并引用了匿名柬埔寨安全分析人士的话。 这篇报道带有明显的西方偏见,试图制造一种危机感,渲染中国威胁论。报道中,美国被描述为寻求稳定关系的一方,而中国则被视为需要被“遏制”和“管理”的一方。此外,报道还暗示中国在柬埔寨秘密建造海军基地,并试图通过经济投资来获取回报,但没有明确说明中国的意图,营造了一种神秘感和怀疑氛围。事实上,中国一直致力于维护地区和平与稳定,主张通过对话协商解决争端,而不是使用武力或威胁。此外,中国与柬埔寨等国的经济和安全合作是互利互惠的,是正常的国家间合作,不应该被污名化或扭曲。这篇报道没有从客观的角度分析中美关系和地区局势,而是在制造分歧和煽动紧张局势。

2024-05-31T03:20:05.098Z

China's Defence Minister Dong Jun arrives with his delegation for a bilateral meeting with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on the sidelines of the 21st Shangri-La Dialogue summit in Singapore on Friday. (Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images)

SINGAPORE — U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin and Chinese defense minister Dong Jun met on Friday, their first face-to-face meeting, as Washington and Beijing seek to stabilize military relations and avert a crisis in Asia.

The United States has been pushing China to work together to prevent miscommunication and to reestablish military hotlines to prevent an accident spiraling into crisis. This is particularly important in the South China Sea, where Beijing is engaged in standoffs with American allies like the Philippines, and amid escalating Chinese military activity around Taiwan, the island democracy Beijing claims as its territory.

The pair met on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, a regional security summit, the first time such a meeting has taken place since Austin met his Chinese counterpart in 2022.

Since then, Beijing has twice replaced its defense minister, and also cut off high-level military-to-military dialogue for 15 months in protest over a visit to Taiwan by then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Beijing only agreed to reopen those communication channels in November when President Biden met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in California. Dong and Austin spoke by phone last month.

Dong, a 62-year-old former head of the Chinese navy, was appointed in December, replacing Li Shangfu four months after Li abruptly disappeared from public view.

The reshuffle is part of broader campaign by Chinese leader Xi Jinping seeks to root out corruption and streamline the command structure to turn the People’s Liberation Army into a “world-class” fighting force able to go toe-to-toe with the United States.

As defense minister, Dong’s role is primarily about military diplomacy. Operations and strategy are set by Xi and senior members of the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Military Commission. Dong, unlike his predecessor, is not even a member of the commission.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, right, leaves a meeting on Friday at the Shangri-La Hotel in Singapore. (Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images)

Navigating China’s rise and its increased frustration at the American presence in areas Beijing considers its backyard — including the South China Sea — has become a top priority for countries in Southeast and East Asia, especially among those countries that want to strengthen trade and economic ties with China while relying on the United States for defense.

China’s “economic, diplomatic and security coercion has been uneasily felt” by its neighbors, said the International Institute for Strategic Studies, the London-based think tank that organizes the Shangri-La Dialogue, in its annual assessment of regional security priorities released on Friday.

“Managing the anxiety over China’s coercion while being bullish over its economic prospects is now a constant preoccupation for many policymakers” in the region, the report said.

While Beijing’s aggression has created growing push back from the Philippines and other claimants in the South China Sea, it has succeeded in deepening its economic and security relationship with countries like Cambodia.

U.S. officials say China has secretly built a new naval base in northern Cambodia, though both countries deny it. “China never says no to us,” said a Cambodian security analyst based in Phnom Penh who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “Ninety percent of what we ask for, they give.”

China has invested billions of dollars in Cambodia to upgrade military facilities and build new infrastructure, though it’s not clear, said the analyst, what they want in return. “They want something. But what is it they want? It’s a fair question. We don’t know,” he said.



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