US, Chinese defence chiefs talk cooperation despite tensions

AFP  |  Beijing 

US James met his Chinese counterpart in today, aiming to find areas of cooperation despite a mounting military rivalry between the two superpowers.

In opening remarks, called the visit critical "to increase the strategic trust between our countries." He said Mattis' words "carry weight in both the military and political circles back in the "

replied that military relations were crucial to the broader relationship between the two countries and he hoped the discussions would involve "very open and honest dialogue".

was expected to met late Wednesday after talks with other senior officials. His four-day trip to will include visits to regional allies and

His first meeting with Wei, who became earlier this year, comes under a cloud of festering tensions over China's placement of advanced on built-up islets in the Sea, a projection of force that has challenged decades of the US Navy's preeminent presence in the strategically important region.

That, along with rising Chinese pressure on US ally Taiwan, and deepening trade and technology disputes, have elevated the strains between and to new levels.

Showing the US displeasure with China's recent show of force in the Sea -- in which it landed long-range bombers on disputed islands claimed by -- last month Mattis disinvited the Chinese from an exercise of some two dozen navies.

And earlier this month, at a security conference in Singapore, Mattis slammed the Chinese militarisation of its Southeast outposts, noting that Xi promised US three years ago that Beijing would not weaponise the islets.

China's purpose was "intimidation and coercion," Mattis said at the time. Beijing argues that the islands are Chinese territory and says it has the right to install military facilities to protect its sovereignty.

No official agreements are expected out of the visit, with the saying he wants to take a measure of his counterparts to assess their long-term strategic intentions.

He also will discuss Chinese cooperation in pressuring to agree to a denuclearisation programme, currently being negotiated between and

Mattis toned down his rhetoric ahead of the visit, saying he does not want to "poison" the atmosphere ahead of talks with Xi, Wei and others.

"I think the way to address issues between our two nations is to first establish a transparent strategic dialogue: how do the Chinese see the relationship with us developing, how we see it developing," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 27 2018. 11:55 IST