US Secretary of State Antony Blinken heads to Southeast Asia this week to deepen ties with his country’s strategic allies, an official said Monday, with the United States seeking to bolster its regional stance against an increasingly assertive China.
On a 10-day trip that will see him visit Vietnam, Laos, Japan, the Philippines, Singapore and Mongolia, Blinken will carry a message of US commitment to its allies in the region, said Daniel Kritenbrink, a senior US State Department official.
“We’re deepening our bilateral relationships, we’re expanding our allied and partner relationships, which have reached unprecedented heights, and we are creating a latticework of mutually reinforcing partnerships together,” he said.
The United States has in recent years significantly increased its engagement with several countries in Southeast Asia, particularly those locked in territorial disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea.
Blinken’s tour will include his participation in an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) ministerial meeting in Laos, where he will also meet with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi on the sidelines.
President Joe Biden has made expanding US alliances in the region a core part of his administration’s foreign policy, and Kritenbrink said there was “strong bipartisan support on Capitol Hill for our allies and partners and our approach to the region.”
Blinken will begin his six-nation tour in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi, where he will attend the funeral of late communist leader Nguyen Phu Trong which is scheduled to begin on Thursday.
Trong died on Friday at a military hospital in Hanoi “due to old age and serious illness” at the age of 80.
In Laos, the US Secretary of State will participate on Friday and Saturday in the ASEAN ministerial meeting, where he will also meet Foreign Minister Wang.
Neither the United States nor China has confirmed whether the meeting will be a full bilateral sit-down or a less formal exchange.
Blinken will then head to Japan for a meeting of the foreign ministers of the so-called “Quad” alliance, which includes the United States, Australia, Japan and India.
He will be accompanied in Tokyo by US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, with meetings to focus on defense deterrence, according to Kritenbrink and the Japanese foreign ministry.
In Manila, Blinken and Austin will hold similar meetings with their Philippine counterparts, with territorial disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea likely to be high on the agenda.
The meeting comes after the Philippines and China agreed on Sunday to a “provisional arrangement” for resupply missions to Filipino troops stationed at Second Thomas Shoal, a flash point of violent clashes between Beijing and Manila in recent months.
Kritenbrink said the US welcomed the announcement of the deal.
Beijing claims sovereignty over almost the entire South China Sea, a strategic waterway through which trillions of dollars worth of trade passes annually.
Blinken will also meet Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos.
After a stopover in Singapore focused on strengthening bilateral relations, Blinken will end his Asian tour in Mongolia, aiming to strengthen “people-to-people” ties, according to Kritenbrink.