Bloomberg
Secretary of Defense James Mattis played down tensions with Beijing, saying the US was “not out to contain China†and was cooperating whenever possible, but that there would be times they would “step on each other’s toes.â€
“Obviously, we’re not out to contain China. We’d have taken an altogether different stance had that been considered. It has not been considered,†he told reporters on a plane en route to Vietnam.
“We seek a relationship with China that’s grounded in fairness, reciprocity and respect for sovereignty,†he said.
He said Washington is cooperating with China on issues including North Korea and the United Nations. “So we’re two large powers, or two Pacific powers, two economic powers. There’s going to be times we step on each other’s toes, so we’re going to have to find a way to productively manage our relationship,†he said.
Mattis spoke on his way to attend defense ministers’ meetings hosted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Singapore, where he could cross paths with Chinese officials. China cancelled high-level security talks with Mattis that had been planned for mid-October in Beijing, the New York Times reported on October 1.
Escalating Rhetoric
Trump called Mattis “sort of a Democrat†in a weekend interview with “60 Minutes.†He also hinted the former US Marine Corps general may be planning to quit. Mattis is seen as a force for stability in foreign policy in the Trump administration, managing crises from North Korea to Syria under a leader who prides himself on his unpredictability.
Mattis “hasn’t told me†that he plans to leave, Trump added, without directly answering the question of whether he’d like the Pentagon chief to depart.
Mattis’s latest attempt to soften the White House’s messaging came amid escalating rhetoric between the US and China in recent weeks, as the world’s two largest economies remain locked in a trade battle.
Maneuvers in the disputed South China Sea, including a close call between a US and a Chinese destroyer, fueled Beijing’s concern that the US wants to stop China from threatening its dominance of the Indo-Pacific.