Chinese defence minister declines meeting with Pentagon chief

By The Straits Times | Created at 2024-11-21 00:20:47 | Updated at 2024-11-21 10:15:36 10 hours ago
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Nov 21, 2024, 08:05 AM

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Nov 21, 2024, 08:05 AM

WASHINGTON - China’s defence minister declined a meeting with US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin during a meeting of defence leaders in Laos, a move the Pentagon chief said on Nov 20 was unfortunate.

Multilateral gatherings of national security officials in Asia have been used in the past for meetings between US and Chinese defence leaders, but China declined a meeting request by Mr Austin during this week’s South-east Asian Nations (Asean)-Plus defence ministers meeting.

“It’s unfortunate. It affects the region because the region really wants to see us, you know, two significant players in the region, two significant powers, talk to each other,” Mr Austin told reporters.

“I don’t think that it has any sort of implications for the future. I just think that it’s something that they chose to do at this point in time and only they can explain why they chose to not take advantage of a good opportunity.”

Mr Austin met Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun on the sidelines of a Singapore conference earlier in 2024, reiterating their differences on Taiwan and other issues but emphasising the need to keep military-to-military communications open.

Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed on Nov 16 to work with the incoming US administration of Donald Trump as he held his final talks with outgoing President Joe Biden on conflicts from cyber crime to trade, Taiwan, the South China Sea and Russia. REUTERS

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