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Diplomacy
ChinaDiplomacy

US Secretary of State to hold talks with ‘Quad’ members, a first step to coordinate China policy

  • Antony Blinken will speak with foreign ministers of Japan, Australia and India on Thursday
  • Spokesman calls talk ‘critical to our shared goals of a free and open Indo-Pacific and rising to the defining challenges of our time’

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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, shown on February 4 with President Joe Biden looking on, will conduct talks with “Quad” foreign ministers on Thursday. Photo: AFP
Robert Delaneyin WashingtonandOwen Churchillin United States

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will conduct talks with counterparts in Japan, Australia and India on Thursday, part of an effort to advance common goals in the Indo-Pacific region, as the new Biden administration vows to move against Beijing for alleged human rights abuses.

“This discussion with the ‘Quad’ foreign ministers is critical to advancing our shared goals of a free and open Indo-Pacific and rising to the defining challenges of our time,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters in Washington on Wednesday, referring to the quartet of countries that the US has identified as key to checking China’s influence in the region.

Price also announced a virtual meeting between Blinken and his counterparts in Britain, Germany and France, also scheduled for Thursday, billing it as a follow-up to Blinken’s meeting with “the E3” on February 5, when the group discussed their approach to China, Myanmar, Russia and Iran.

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News of the meetings came as President Joe Biden pledged during a CNN town hall event on Tuesday evening that China would face “repercussions” for its treatment of ethnic minority groups in the country’s northwest region. Biden said that the US would “reassert our role as spokespersons for human rights at the UN and other agencies that have an impact on [China’s] attitude”.

Pressed on Wednesday in a separate media briefing about the precise nature of the action Biden alluded to, White House press secretary Jen Psaki, who spoke shortly before Price, would not weigh in on specific measures the administration was considering.

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“We are not in a rush,” Psaki said. “We are focused on communicating and working with our partners and allies around the world.”

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki at the daily briefing in Washington on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki at the daily briefing in Washington on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters
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