China had in 2023 declined a request from the United States for a meeting between their defense chiefs at an annual security forum in Singapore this weekend, media reported on Monday, a new sign of strain between the powers.
The United States and Chinese defence chiefs are set to meet in Singapore this weekend, to hold rare direct talks.
The development is said to offer hopes of further military dialogue aimed at preventing flashpoint disputes from spinning out of control.
China had in 2023 declined a request from the United States for a meeting between their defense chiefs at an annual security forum in Singapore this weekend, media reported on Monday, a new sign of strain between the powers.
“Overnight, the PRC informed the U.S. that they have declined our early May invitation for Secretary (Lloyd) Austin to meet with PRC Minister of National Defense Li Shangfu in Singapore,” the Pentagon said in a statement to the Wall Street Journal, referring to China by the initials of its official name, the People’s Republic of China.
However, AFP reports that the expected meeting between the United States’ Lloyd Austin and China’s Dong Jun at the Shangri-La Dialogue will be the first substantive face-to-face talks between their countries’ defence chiefs in 18 months.
The security forum is an annual gathering of defence chiefs from around the world that has in recent years become a barometer of US-China relations. While this year’s edition, starting Friday, will come a week after China held military drills around Taiwan and warned of war over the island.
The dispute over democratic and US-backed Taiwan, which China has vowed to bring under its control, is the highest-profile of many rows between the global powers. Beijing is also furious over Washington’s deepening defence ties in the Asia-Pacific, particularly with the Philippines.
China has in recent years grown increasingly assertive in staking its claims in the contested South China Sea, including by building artificial islands and militarising them.
It effectively suspended military talks with the United States in late 2022 in response to then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan.
The two sides agreed after a summit between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden in November last year to restart high-level military talks.
Austin and Dong then talked over the phone in April.
Their meeting in Singapore — announced by the Pentagon last week — would be the most substantial encounter on defence since the presidential summit.
However, the two sides have yet to resume much of the direct military dialogue that was scrapped after Pelosi’s Taiwan visit.
“The hope here is for the (Dong-Austin) meeting to be the beginnings of cautious rapprochement to re-establish military-to-military open lines of communication,” Mustafa Izzuddin, senior international affairs analyst with consultancy Solaris Strategies Singapore, told AFP.
Biden and Xi agreed at their summit to set up a communications channel between the US Indo-Pacific Command chief and China’s commanders responsible for military operations near Taiwan, Japan and in the South China Sea.
A US official recently highlighted the importance of direct talks between those commanders. Izzuddin described such dialogue as “essential”.
“It’s exceptionally important because when we talk about what is happening in the South China Sea and Taiwan, it’s essentially about defence and security,” he said.
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