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US not encircling China - White House
Washington, Oct 28
With US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criss-crossing Asian countries – in particular those in Chinese neighbourhood – over the next two weeks, the White House has said that it wants to engage Beijing and has no intention to encircle it.
"However, that even as we cooperate on some issues, we're going to disagree, and that we’re going to disagree directly with one another, but that those disagreements need not and should not derail cooperation on other issues. So that you can have a relationship that is mature enough and healthy enough that we can cooperate on some things, disagree on others," he said.
But it's similarly in the interests of the region for us to, again, be very engaged with ASEAN, to be deepening our partnership with India, and to firm up our alliances with Korea and Japan," Rhodes said in response to a question.
"If we look at our record over the last few years, one of the things we’re most proud of is putting those alliances with Korea and Japan on a firmer footing, again, getting at the table in terms of ASEAN, and then dealing with the partnership in India that has such enormous potential," he said.
"And frankly, it is a relationship that, because it’s between two democracies, has a kind of qualitative potential that is unique. The US and India, as the world’s two largest democracies, share interests but we also share values. And that opens the doors to cooperation bilaterally but also cooperation in the region and around the world."
Washington, Oct 28
With US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criss-crossing Asian countries – in particular those in Chinese neighbourhood – over the next two weeks, the White House has said that it wants to engage Beijing and has no intention to encircle it.
"However, that even as we cooperate on some issues, we're going to disagree, and that we’re going to disagree directly with one another, but that those disagreements need not and should not derail cooperation on other issues. So that you can have a relationship that is mature enough and healthy enough that we can cooperate on some things, disagree on others," he said.
But it's similarly in the interests of the region for us to, again, be very engaged with ASEAN, to be deepening our partnership with India, and to firm up our alliances with Korea and Japan," Rhodes said in response to a question.
"If we look at our record over the last few years, one of the things we’re most proud of is putting those alliances with Korea and Japan on a firmer footing, again, getting at the table in terms of ASEAN, and then dealing with the partnership in India that has such enormous potential," he said.
"And frankly, it is a relationship that, because it’s between two democracies, has a kind of qualitative potential that is unique. The US and India, as the world’s two largest democracies, share interests but we also share values. And that opens the doors to cooperation bilaterally but also cooperation in the region and around the world."