Pentagon chief heads to Asian summit as nations fret over S. China Sea

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US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter will depart Tuesday (May 31) for an Asian security summit in Singapore, where Beijing’s military expansion across the South China Sea likely will once again dominate discussions.

Regional neighbours are fretting over what they see as China’s expansionism as it rushes to exert sovereignty over the waterway, a major global shipping route believed to be home to large oil and gas reserves.

China is using dredgers and other tools to convert low-lying ocean features and sandy blips into military bases.

A Pentagon report this month said China has added more than 3,200 acres (1,300 hectares) of land to the seven features it occupies in the Spratly Islands archipelago.

The so-called Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual meeting in Singapore, will see defence ministers, military chiefs and defence experts from the Asia-Pacific region and beyond discuss regional security issues.

Aside from the South China Sea, delegates are expected to focus on the growing threat of terrorism in the region and North Korea’s nuclear programme.

Since becoming President Barack Obama’s fourth Pentagon chief in February 2015, Carter has taken a forceful tone on Beijing’s South China Sea construction.

He criticised the drive at last year’s Shangri-La meeting and on Friday, Carter said China risks creating a “Great Wall of self-isolation.”

“Countries across the region – allies, partners and the unaligned – are voicing concerns publicly and privately at the highest levels,” Carter said.

The United States has conducted several “freedom of navigation” operations where it pointedly ignores China’s claims of sovereign exclusion zones around the islands by closely flying or sailing past.

Carter’s trip will see him first visit an Army base in Arizona.

He had also considered meeting his Japanese counterpart Gen Nakatani during a visit to Japan, but the two decided to meet in Singapore instead, a US defence official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The official said the meeting would have been too politically sensitive, given the furor surrounding the arrest of a former US Marine on Okinawa in connection to the death of a 20-year-old woman who had been missing since late April.

A series of crimes including rapes, assaults and hit-and-run accidents by US military personnel, dependents and civilians have long sparked local protests on the crowded island.

Carter and Obama were quick to condemn the crime and offer “regret.”

While in Singapore, Carter will be joined by senior US military leaders, including Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson and the commander of US Pacific Command, Admiral Harry Harris.

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Tuesday, May 31, 2016 – 12:07
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