IANS | 15 May, 2024
The US' bilateral and trilateral relationships with South Korea and
Japan will help enhance prosperity and security for all parties in the
Indo-Pacific, US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said on
Tuesday.
Campbell made the remarks in a virtual speech, pointing out that
such partnerships have never carried more significance than now as the
world faces many opportunities and challenges at the same time, Yonhap
news agency reported.
"Both alliances have transformed from
primarily security-focused relationships to truly comprehensive global
partnerships, with impacts reverberating far beyond the Indo-Pacific,"
Campbell said in a prerecorded keynote speech during a forum hosted by
the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, a Seoul-based think tank.
Campbell
cast the series of bilateral and trilateral summits the US has had with
South Korea, Japan, and separately with Japan and the Philippines as a
clear demonstration of the "not just historic but unrivalled" level of
commitment from Washington and its allies in the Indo-Pacific.
"As
President Biden has made clear, our partners and allies are critical if
we are to be successful in seizing these key opportunities and
maintaining our readiness to confront the most pressing challenges of
the 21st century," Campbell said.
"Our bilateral and trilateral
bonds with the Republic of Korea and Japan will define the future of
Asia and grow our collective prosperity and security," he said.
On
the trilateral cooperation with Seoul and Tokyo, Campbell noted that
such commitment was made possible by the leaders of the two Asian
allies, which led to a dramatic improvement in their bilateral
relations.
"We wouldn't be here without the tremendous courage
that President Yoon (Suk Yeol) and (Japanese) Prime Minister (Fumio)
Kishida have demonstrated in bringing Seoul and Tokyo closer together,"
Campbell said.
The Biden administration's Indo-Pacific strategy
focuses on creating a "lattice-fence" structure of alliances, Campbell
said, referring to trilateral or wider groupings of a handful of
like-minded countries.
"We understand the tremendous importance of
working together trilaterally and multilaterally and networking our
alliances," he said. "We're creating a lattice fence arrangement with
intertwined, overlapping and interlocking engagements."
The
"latticework" alliances are compared with the "hub and spokes" alliances
that centre around each country's close security bond with the US but
not with each other.
The US AUKUS security partnership with
Australia and Britain and the Quad security dialogue with Australia,
India and Japan are cited as latticework alliance partnerships in the
Indo-Pacific region -- groupings largely seen as aimed at keeping an
assertive China in check.
Campbell also pointed out that
modernising the alliances is about sharing the resolve to address
regional threats, including North Korea.
"The people of the
Republic of Korea and Japan know too well the danger to peace and
stability posed by the DPRK, and we are absolutely united in confronting
that shared threat," he said, referring to the South by its official
name.
DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the North's official name.