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Obama ignites Chinese anger as he warns against force
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) April 29, 2014


Obama's Asia visit shows US sees China as 'opponent': state media
Beijing (AFP) April 29, 2014 - A major Chinese newspaper hit out at Barack Obama on Tuesday after the US president said Washington was not seeking to counter Beijing's influence in the Asia-Pacific.

The state-run China Daily wrote in an editorial that Obama's week-long visit to Asia, which concludes Tuesday, made it "increasingly obvious that Washington is taking Beijing as an opponent."

China's claims to various islands, reefs and atolls in the South and East China Seas have been a constant theme of Obama's tour of Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines.

The trip has seen a US-Japan joint statement and a new US-Philippines defence agreement, and the paper wrote that while "from Tokyo to Manila, Obama has tried to pick his words so as not to antagonise Beijing", his journey was "essentially about Washington's and its allies' unease about a rising China".

At a joint news conference with Philippine President Benigno Aquino on Monday, Obama said that while Washington did not take a position on the sovereignty of disputed territories, such issues must be addressed peacefully, not with "intimidation or coercion".

He also said that Washington has "a constructive relationship with China" and has no desire to contain or counter Beijing.

But the China Daily blasted those words as "hollow" rhetoric, warning that Obama's "sweet promises of a new type of major-country relationship should not blind us to the grim political reality".

"Ganging up with its troublemaking allies, the US is presenting itself as a security threat to China," the paper wrote.

Shortly before Obama's arrival in the Philippines on Monday, Washington and Manila signed a new defence pact that will insert US forces close to the volatile South China Sea.

Days earlier, the US and Japan issued a joint statement explicitly stating that islands at the centre of a dispute with China are covered by the security alliance that obliges Washington to come to Tokyo's aid if attacked.

Beijing responded with fury to both moves, and the China Daily maintained Tuesday that the "foremost threat" was not China's maritime disputes with Japan and the Philippines but rather "the threatening image of China" that the US and its allies were projecting.

Barack Obama ended an Asian tour Tuesday with a warning to China against using force in territorial disputes, as Chinese authorities accused the US president of ganging up with "troublemaking" allies.

The barbs ensured a tense finish to a four-nation trip dominated by the worsening maritime rows between China and US allies in the region, which have triggered fears of military conflict.

"We believe that nations and peoples have the right to live in security and peace, to have their sovereignty and territorial integrity respected," Obama told a gathering of US and Filipino troops in Manila.

"We believe that international law must be upheld, that freedom of navigation must be preserved and commerce must not be impeded. We believe that disputes must be resolved peacefully and not by intimidation or force."

Close American ally the Philippines has been embroiled in one of the highest-profile territorial disputes with China, over tiny islets, reefs and rocks in the South China Sea.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, which is believed to contain huge deposits of oil and gas, even waters and islands or reefs close to its neighbours.

The Philippines, which has one of the weakest militaries in the region, has repeatedly called on longtime ally the United States for help as China has increased military and diplomatic pressure to take control of the contested areas.

The Philippines and the United States signed an agreement on Monday that will allow a greater US military presence on Filipino bases.

- Obama pledges support -

And Obama sought on Tuesday to reassure the Philippines that the United States would support its ally in the event of being attacked, citing a 1951 mutual defence treaty between the two nations.

"This treaty means our two nations pledge, and I am quoting, 'our common determination to defend themselves from external armed attacks'," Obama said.

"And no potential aggressor can be under the illusion that either of them stands alone. In other words, our commitment to defend the Philippines is ironclad. The United States will keep that commitment because allies will never stand alone."

Nevertheless, Obama did not specifically mention coming to the aid of the Philippines if there were a conflict over the contested South China Sea areas, as his hosts had hoped.

On the first leg of his Asian tour in Tokyo, Obama had made such a pledge of support to Japan, which is locked in its own dispute with China over rival claims to islands in the East China Sea.

Obama's nuanced position on the Philippines was part of a tight-rope act he had tried to perform during his trip -- reassuring allies wary about China's perceived increased hostility while not antagonising the leadership in Beijing.

While offering pledges of protection to Japan and the Philippines, Obama also insisted the United States was not seeking to counter or contain China.

And reflecting the difficulties of Obama's balancing act, there were complaints in the Philippines that he had not offered explicit support in the event of a conflict over the contested South China Sea areas.

"No firm commitment from US to defend PH," said the front-page headline of the Philippine Daily Inquirer after Obama met president Benigno Aquino on Monday but did not pledge South China Sea backing.

- 'Troublemaking allies' -

Nevertheless, an editorial in the state-run China Daily newspaper on Tuesday signalled that Chinese authorities viewed Obama's trips to Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines as a tour of anti-Chinese hostility.

"It is increasingly obvious that Washington is taking Beijing as an opponent," the editorial said as it summarised his visit.

"With Obama reassuring the US allies of protection in any conflict with China, it is now clear that Washington is no longer bothering to conceal its attempt to contain China's influence in the region."

The editorial warned against believing Obama's "sweet promises" of a new, constructive relationship between the United States and China, and instead outlined what it described as a "grim geopolitical reality".

"Ganging up with its troublemaking allies, the US is presenting itself as a security threat to China," it said.

Meanwhile, three Chinese coastguard ships sailed into waters around the islands in the East China Sea disputed between China and Japan, the Japanese coastguard said.

It said the vessels entered 12 nautical miles (22 kilometres) into Japan's territorial waters off one of the Senkaku islands, which China also claims and calls the Diaoyus.

It was the second such move since Obama announced last week that Washington would defend Japan if China initiates an attack in the contested area.

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