U.S. and Chinese military officials met Thursday and Friday in Hawaii to discuss tensions at sea as both countries adjusted their strategies in the Western Pacific and the Trump administration sought to ease tensions.
The talks were held under the Military Maritime Consultative Agreement, a forum that the Oahu-based U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said focuses on reducing the risk of unsafe and unprofessional encounters at sea. The agreement was established in 1998.
Indo-Pacific Command said officials from its own offices, the U.S. Pacific Fleet, U.S. Pacific Air Forces, and the U.S. Coast Guard met with a Chinese military delegation.
In a statement Monday, the Chinese navy called the talks “candid and constructive” and said both sides agreed that better communication could reduce the risk of miscalculations that could escalate tension and “enhance professionalism.”
China’s statement also said, “China firmly opposes any action to undermine China’s sovereignty and security under the pretext of freedom of navigation and overflight, (and) opposes any infringement, provocation and close-in reconnaissance and harassment targeting China.”
In 2016, an international court said China’s expansive claims had “no legal basis.” Beijing has rejected that ruling and continued to deploy military and coast guard forces to disputed islands and reefs.
The U.S. military has continued freedom of navigation operations in disputed areas over Beijing’s objections and expanded training with regional partners.