01/06/2024
China meeting, Marcos
(Adds U.S.-China meeting begins)
By Idrees Ali and Xinghui Kok
SINGAPORE, May 31 (Reuters) - The Shangri-La Dialogue summit began on Friday with the U.S. and China defence chiefs holding their first face-to-face meeting in two years and the Philippines' president set to give a speech expected to touch on sensitive South China Sea claims.
The fraught U.S.-China relationship is expected to loom over Asia's top security meeting, as are the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and the South China Sea tensions.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin arrived in Singapore early on Friday. He went into a meeting with China's defence minister, D**g Jun, in the afternoon that was to discuss contentious issues such as Taiwan and the South China Sea, but also the importance of keeping communications open, Pentagon officials said.
Austin is scheduled to deliver a speech at the forum on Saturday; D**g will speak on Sunday.
"China believes that high level China-U.S. strategic military communications helps stabilise military to military relations; China maintains an open attitude towards this," Chinese defence ministry spokesperson Wu Qian said on Thursday.
Friday night, however, the spotlight will be on Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr, who is expected to discuss the legal and geopolitical position of the Philippines on the South China Sea and note the importance of the waterway to global trade.
China claims sovereignty over the shoals and almost all of the South China Sea, including parts claimed by the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam, despite a 2016 ruling by the Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration that found Beijing's sweeping claims have no legal basis.
D**g and Austin are likely to discuss those issues, as well as Taiwan. Austin will reiterate the United States' longstanding "One China" policy but also bring up China's military activities near