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Dhaka Tribune

South China Sea takes centre stage at US-Asean summit

Update : 16 Feb 2016, 08:29 PM

US President Barack Obama and allies from Southeast Asia will turn their attention to China on Tuesday on the second day of a summit intended to improve commercial links and provide a united front on maritime disputes with Beijing.

After a first day focused on trade and economic issues, Obama and his counterparts from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) will try to arrive at a common position on the South China Sea during a second day of talks at Sunnylands, a California resort.

China and several Asean states have conflicting and overlapping claims in the South China Sea, but not all the Southeast Asian nations agree on how to handle them.

US officials want the summit to produce a statement calling for China to follow international law and handle disputes peacefully.

“We will be continuing to work with our Asean partners on a potential statement that we might issue together,” White House national security adviser Susan Rice told reporters on Monday.

“We obviously have issued such statements in the past with Asean, and in it we consistently underscore our shared commitment to a peaceful resolution of disputes, freedom of commerce and navigation, the rule of law, and the necessity of disputes being resolved through peaceful, legal means.”

Though China dominated the summit, the White House emphasised non-China related aspects, such as strengthening commercial ties. The chief executives of IBM, Microsoft and Cisco were brought into Monday’s private sessions with the leaders to help make the point.

But even business leaders were watching the South China Sea issue.

“What keeps us up at night is that one of the big tension areas is the South China Sea,” said Alexander Feldman, president of the US ASEAN Business Council.

“We would like as a business community to see those differences and overlapping claims be addressed in a way that is done though discussion rather than military confrontation.” 

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