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US-EU announce dialogue on China; Nato pledges to work with Japan, other Asia-Pacific nations to counter Beijing

  • New transatlantic dialogue needed to deal with China as ‘partner’, ‘competitor’ and ‘rival’, Josep Borrell of the EU says after meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken
  • Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg discusses plan to build ties with ‘like-minded democracies’ in Asia-Pacific

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Antony Blinken, US secretary of state (left), speaks while Josep Borrell, vice president of the European Commission, listens during news conference in Brussels on Wednesday. Photo: Bloomberg
Robert Delaney

The United States and Europe pledged deeper cooperation on countering China on Wednesday, with an agreement to start a formal US-European Union dialogue on the issue and a pledge by Nato to close ranks with “like-minded democracies” in the Asia-Pacific region.

“We decided to continue meetings at the senior official and expert levels on topics such as reciprocity, economic issues, resilience, human rights, security multilateralism and areas for constructive engagement with China, such as climate change,” said European Commission Vice-President Josep Borrell, the EU’s top official for foreign affairs.

“We share an assessment of China’s role as a partner, as a competitor, and as a … rival,” Borrell said. “We equally agree, and this is maybe all most important, to support the fullest possible involvement of the United States in the European Union Defence Initiative, and to enhance our dialogue on this issue.”

Blinken at the news briefing following the Nato foreign ministers meeting at Nato headquarters in Brussels on Wednesday. Photo: EPA via AFP
Blinken at the news briefing following the Nato foreign ministers meeting at Nato headquarters in Brussels on Wednesday. Photo: EPA via AFP

US Secretary of State Blinken, who is in Brussels for most of this week, said that the US-EU dialogue was needed to confront “the challenges that China presents to the rules-based order that we both subscribe to”.

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Earlier in the day, North Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in a discussion with Blinken that he plans to build partnerships with Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and other countries in the Asia-Pacific region as a bulwark against China, as the military alliance of 30 European and North American nations develops its strategic plan, known as Nato 2030.

“To strengthen partnerships with like-minded democracies is a way also to protect the rules-based international order. And of course, this is all about the consequences of the rise of China, and on many of the issues in Nato 2030.”

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Blinken’s meetings with Borrell and Stoltenberg came as the new US administration held a series of meetings with Nato, the European Union, South Korea and the “Quad” countries of India, Japan and Australia over the past two weeks, seeking to shore up Washington’s alliances that were tested under the previous Trump administration.

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