World

Russia says US driving Southeast Asian militarisation

Foreign minister claims Washington trying to limit Moscow, Beijing’s influence in region

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 13 Nov 2022 9:30PM

Russia says US driving Southeast Asian militarisation
Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has accused the United States of driving increased militarisation in Southeast Asia as well as trying to contain Beijing and Moscow’s influence in the region. – AFP pic, November 13, 2022

PHNOM PENH – Russia’s foreign minister today accused the United States of driving increased militarisation in Southeast Asia, saying that Washington was trying to contain Beijing and Moscow’s influence in the region.

Sergei Lavrov was speaking to reporters at Phnom Penh’s airport after attending the East Asia Summit in Cambodia – and before flying to Bali for the G20 summit where China’s leader Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden will meet.

Earlier on Sunday, Biden said he would establish “red lines” with Xi.

Washington is attempting to boost its influence in Southeast Asia, worried by Beijing’s increasingly assertive behaviour in the region, which it views as its strategic backyard.

Lavrov accused the United States of pushing the “militarisation of this region, clearly aimed at containing China and limiting Russian interests in the region”.

As the Ukraine invasion has ground on, and with Western sanctions biting, Russia has pivoted toward Southeast Asia in an attempt to shore up its battered economy.

Lavrov called Washington’s strategy – which has seen the United States push for closer relations with Southeast Asian nations – “not inclusive and that compete with the inclusive structures created around Asean”.

The regional summit in Cambodia has been dominated by international concerns, as first Ukraine and then the US-China rivalry overshadowed local concerns such as Myanmar. – AFP, November 13, 2022

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