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US seeks unity on South China Sea

Last Updated 04 May 2018, 07:39 IST

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Indonesia on Monday hoping to encourage unity among Southeast Asian nations in an effort to manage increasingly tense disputes with China.

Clinton’s last trip to the region in July was marred by the failure of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to reach a consensus at talks in Cambodia, amid divisions in the 10-member group on how to treat a rising China.

The top US diplomat was slated to meet Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa shortly after arriving in Jakarta, and the following day will hold talks with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and visit the headquarters of ASEAN, as part of her effort to promote ties with the economically dynamic and mostly US-friendly bloc.

She hopes “to get a sense of where we are and to get the Indonesians' advice about how we can be supportive, how we can put more wind into the sails of a diplomatic effort, which is what we all very much want”, a senior US official said on her plane on customary condition of anonymity.

“The most important thing is that we end up in a diplomatic process where these issues are addressed in a strong diplomatic conversation between a unified ASEAN and China rather than through any kind of coercion,” the official said.

Clinton, who made a refuelling stop in Brisbane, Australia, on her way from a South Pacific summit in the Cook Islands, will head to China on Tuesday for talks on the often uneasy relationship between the world's two largest economies.

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(Published 03 September 2012, 18:23 IST)

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