US says it could act against China firms, banks over Russian war support

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US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell has said there was an urgent need for European and Nato countries to send a collective message of concern to China.

US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said European and Nato countries need to send China a message of concern.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON, Virginia The United States and other nations could take steps against Chinese firms and financial institutions over Beijing’s backing for the Russian war against Ukraine, a top US official said on May 31.

The Biden administration has stepped up warnings about China’s backing for Moscow and issued an executive order in December that threatened punitive measures against financial institutions helping Russia skirt Western sanctions.

“I think where we are primarily focused (is) on Chinese companies that have been involved in a systematic way in supporting Russia,” US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell told reporters after a meeting near the Virginia town of Washington.

“We’ve also looked closely at financial institutions.”

The US State Department’s second-ranked official spoke at the start of a meeting with the vice-foreign ministers of Japan and South Korea, Mr Masataka Okano and Kim Hong-kyun, respectively. The three allies have stepped up cooperation in the face of shared concerns about China, North Korea and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Earlier this week, Mr Campbell said there was an urgent need for European and Nato countries to send a collective message of concern to China.

“There will be steps that are taken, not just by the United States, but other countries, signalling our profound displeasure about what China is seeking to do in its relationship with Russia on the battlefield in Ukraine,” he said on May 31.

Mr Campbell met China’s Vice-Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu on May 30 and raised US concerns about Beijing’s support to Russia’s defence industrial base undermining European security, the State Department said.

Mr Campbell said his talks with his South Korean and Japanese counterparts would prepare the way for a trilateral leaders’ summit later in 2024. He said the date was not yet set, but the meeting was of the “highest priority”.

In a joint statement from the May 31 meeting, the allies reaffirmed their commitment to use their “collective capacity to strengthen security and maintain peace and stability across the Indo-Pacific”.

They pledged to continue working closely to boost economic security, including through Minerals Security Partnership projects, which are aimed at lessening reliance on China and Russia for critical resources needed in high-tech applications.

The allies also committed to work “ever more closely to support Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, recovery, and efforts to hold Russia accountable for its actions”, the statement said.

Mr Campbell welcomed “renewed diplomacy” between China, Japan and South Korea, after leaders from the three countries met on May 27 for the first time in four years. The two US allies had offered a “very deep and sincere debrief” on their three-way meeting with China, he said.

He also commended Philippine President

Ferdinand Marcos Jr for a speech he gave at the Shangri-La Dialogue defence summit

in Singapore, where the Asian leader alluded to “illegal, coercive and aggressive” actions by China in the disputed South China Sea.

Mr Campbell praised the speech as strong and purposeful, but would not directly answer a reporter’s question on whether any incident involving the China Coast Guard that resulted in a Philippine service member being killed would trigger Washington’s mutual defence treaty with Manila, calling it “hypothetical”.

Encounters between the Philippines and China in Asia’s most contested waters have grown more tense and frequent in the past year as Beijing presses its claims to shoals in waters that Manila says are well within its exclusive economic zone.

“We fundamentally believe that the United States and the Philippines are moving towards a closer set of relations in which we will be able to deepen our security partnership,” Mr Campbell said. REUTERS

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