US
President Barack Obama will press leaders from Southeast Asia to boost
trade and back common goals for the South China Sea during a summit that
the White House hopes will solidify US influence in the region.
Obama will also discuss curbing North Korea and
plans to fight the Islamic State group during the two-day meeting with
Association of Southeast Asian Nations at Sunnylands, a California
resort.
The visit, at the same location where Obama once
hosted Chinese President Xi Jinping, is designed to demonstrate
Washington's commitment both as a counterweight to Beijing and as an
eager trading partner with ASEAN nations.
It also helps cement a legacy issue for Obama, who
has championed a US pivot to Asia during his presidency and is
determined to present the US as a Pacific power.
"We want to make very clear that the United States
is going to be at the table and a part of setting the agenda in the
Asia- Pacific in the decades to come," White House deputy national
security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters last week.
The first day of the summit on Monday (local time)
is scheduled to focus on economic issues and trade, including discussion
of the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, which includes four of the ASEAN
members: Vietnam, Singapore, Brunei and Malaysia.
Others are interested in joining, and the White House wants to make sure the pact goes into effect.
On
Tuesday, the leaders will discuss maritime issues including the South
China Sea, where China and several Southeast Asian states have
conflicting and overlapping claims.
Rhodes said Obama would deliver a tough message to China that disputes over the area must be resolved peacefully.
"We
will continue to underscore the principle that these issues have to be
resolved consistent with international norms and not through bigger
nations bullying smaller ones," he said.
The
challenge at the summit may be to get all ASEAN countries to agree on a
strong statement on the issue. Analysts say China has put pressure on
countries such as Cambodia and Laos not to sign on.
Pressure from Obama, and a message that the US will continue to engage with the group, may counteract that.
Reuters
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