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Several Asian nations are seeking to bolster informal alliances among themselves, regional diplomats and officials said, unsettled by growing fears that the United States could not be relied on to maintain as a buffer against China's assertiveness.
Countries including Australia, Japan, India and Vietnam are quietly stepping up discussions and cooperation, although taking care that they do not upset Beijing, the diplomats said. No one was talking about a formal alliance yet.
Inaugurating the weekend Shangri-La Dialogue, the region's premier security forum, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said:
His comments resonated through the three-day meeting that ended on Sunday.
Regional officials and analysts said there was growing mistrust of the administration of US President Donald Trump, especially because of his withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) on trade, and then, last week, the pullout from the Paris climate accord.
Many fear Trump is signalling a deeper retreat from a traditional US security role that has underpinned the region for decades.
US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis told the Singapore forum that Washington remained committed to the region, and insisted it would oppose China's militarisation of the disputed South China Sea, one of Asia's most volatile hotspots.
“We trust Mattis and we trust (US Pacific Commander Harry) Harris, but at the very top? The trust gap is very wide," said one senior Asian military officer.
Malaysian defence minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Asia was still trying to figure out Trump's policy in the region.
“I would like to know very clearly what are the true intentions of the new administration,” he said.
In broad terms, Singapore defence minister Ng Eng Hen confirmed accelerated co-operation among partners, but he also said he welcomed Mattis' reassurances.
“Countries look at the landscape and you adjust, and that's what good leadership does...you put yourself in a position so if there are changes, you are not caught completely off-guard,” Ng said at a news conference on Sunday.
Tim Huxley, a regional security expert, wrote in a newspaper article last week that the five countries needed to improve the inter-operability of their militaries as the regional balance of power shifted.
While China was becoming richer and more assertive, US strategy and policy had entered “a period of, at best, uncertainty under President Donald Trump”, he said.
India did not send a government delegation to the Shangri-La forum, but has been active in strengthening cooperation in the region.
It sent four ships and a P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft to naval exercises with Singapore last month, and is discreetly improving Vietnam's defences. Several Indian defence companies attended the International Maritime Defence Exhibition and Conference in Singapore last month, including the manufacturers of short-range missiles.
New Delhi rejected an Australian request to join its Malabar naval exercises next month with Japan and the United States for fear of antagonising China, which has warned against expanding the drills, navy officials and diplomats said.
But officials say the exercises will expand gradually, noting that India has bilateral defence agreements with countries including Australia, Singapore and Vietnam.
“There are different strands of cooperation. At some point they will come together,” one Indian official said.
Beijing sent a low-key delegation to the Shangri-La forum in 2017, but its officials were warily watching developments and warning of “Cold War thinking” behind moves to strengthen alliances.
(This article was published in an arrangement with Reuters)
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