Harris
offers Vietnam help to counter China in South China Sea
BY JOSEPH
CHOI - 08/25/21 11:44 AM EDT
2
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Vice President Harris offered the U.S's support to Vietnam in
several areas including bolstering its maritime security as tensions between
the Southeast Asian country and China continue to rise.
Reuters reported that
Harris met with top Vietnamese leaders including President Nguyen Xuan
Phuc, Vice President Vo Thi Anh Xuan and Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh.
A White House official told Reuters that Harris offered aid to Vietnam
in support of COVID-19 vaccination programs and efforts to combat climate
change. On Wednesday, Harris announced the U.S. would be donating an additional 1
million Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine doses to Vietnam.
In an address on Wednesday, Harris accused China of
"bullying."
"We need to find ways to pressure, raise the pressure … on Beijing
to abide by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and to
challenge its bullying and excessive maritime claims," Harris said when meeting Nguyen.
These remarks come one day after Harris rebuked China while in
Singapore.
“Beijing’s actions continue to undermine the rules-based order and
threaten the sovereignty of nations. The United States stands with our allies
and partners in the face of these threats,” she said, though she emphasized
that U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia “is not against any one country,
nor is it designed to make anyone choose between countries.”
Numerous countries in the region including Taiwan, Vietnam, China,
Malaysia and the Philippines lay claim to part of the South China Sea, which
is home to various shipping lanes, gas fields and fishing grounds. In
recent months, the U.S. has adopted a policy to counteract China's growing
influence in the disputed waters, which some Southeastern countries have
quietly endorsed.
While in Vietnam, Harris also visited a memorial to
the late Arizona Sen. John
McCain (R), where she paid tribute to "an extraordinary American
hero."
Harris's Vietnam
trip had been temporarily delayed, reportedly due to incidents of "Havana
syndrome," an illness that has largely affected foreign diplomats that
causes sluggishness, nausea and fatigue. The State Department has declined to
confirm these reports.
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