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Obama-Xi talks tackle sea dispute

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WASHINGTON—US President Barack Obama opened a meeting with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping with a promise of candid discussion over Beijing’s alleged military buildup in the South China Sea.

“We will have candid exchanges about areas where we have differences, issues like human rights, cyber and maritime issues,” Obama said as he sat across the conference table from his Chinese counterpart.

US officials have expressed concern that China’s actions in the South China Sea are not consistent with Xi’s pledge at the White House last year not to pursue militarization of the hotly contested and strategically vital waterway.

Nuclear talks. United States Presidenet Barack Obama speaks during a bilateral meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping at the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. 

China claims virtually all the South China Sea despite conflicting claims by Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines, and has built up artificial islands in the area in recent months, including some with airstrips.

“We do continue to be concerned about militarization in the South China Sea,” said senior Obama foreign policy aide Ben Rhodes ahead of the meeting with Xi.

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“We certainly have seen developments, reports that are not consistent with commitments to avoid and to non-militarize the South China Sea.”

“This will be certainly an important topic of conversation between the two presidents.”

Washington has since October carried out two high-profile “freedom of navigation” operations in which it sailed warships within 12 nautical miles of islets claimed by China.

Xi spoke of the need to avoid misunderstandings and big disruptions in the “major power relations” between the two countries.

But state-run news agency Xinhua cited the Chinese leader as saying that “China will not accept any behavior under the disguise of freedom of navigation that violates its sovereignty and damages its security interests.”

On Thursday, Beijing’s defense ministry also warned the US Navy to “be careful” in the South China Sea and slammed a newly signed agreement between Washington and Manila.

Earlier this month, the Philippines agreed to give US forces access to five military bases, including some close to the disputed South China Sea, where tensions have risen over Beijing’s assertion of its territorial claims.

A defense ministry spokesman said strengthening military alliances was “a reflection of a Cold War mentality.”

In Washington, Obama and Xi also discussed pressure on North Korea, which in January detonated a nuclear device and launched a long-range rocket a month later, prompting UN sanctions backed by both Beijing and Washington.

“Of great importance to both of us is North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, which threatens the security and stability of the region,” said Obama.

“President Xi and I are both committed to the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and the full implementation of UN sanctions.”

“We are going to discuss how we can discourage actions like nuclear missile tests that escalate tensions and violate international obligations.”

The White House wants to keep up pressure on the North Korean regime, increasing the economic and diplomatic cost of ignoring international appeals to mothball its nukes.

Xinhua cited Xi as saying that the sanctions should be carried out “fully and strictly.”

US officials have long believed that China could more forcefully wield its influence over Pyongyang, including encouraging its Stalinist neighbor to tone down destabilizing rhetoric.

Tensions are only expected to rise in advance of a major North Korean Communist Party Congress in North Korea in May.

The White House has begun talks with South Korea over the deployment of a missile defense system. But it has struggled to convince China that the move is only in response to Pyongyang’s threats.

China fears it may be an effort to deepen US influence in the region.

“It is designed and capable only of responding to the North Korean threat,” said Dan Kritenbrink, senior Asian affairs director at the National Security Council.

“It in no way threatens either Chinese or Russian or other security interests in the region and will do nothing to undermine strategic stability between the United States and China.”

After the meeting the White House released a joint statement promising a series of technical measures to help boost nuclear security, including actions against nuclear smuggling and securing “radioactive sources.”

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