Russia and China should join forces in Southeast Asia, Lavrov tells Wang amid Asean summit

Lavrov thanked Wang for China’s “balanced and consistent” position on the Ukraine crisis and welcomed Beijing’s initiatives to promote approaches that took into account the interests of all the stakeholders, according to a readout by Russia’s foreign ministry.

The two diplomats also discussed “cooperation within Asean, considering the fact that certain countries have become increasingly proactive in setting up restricted bloc-based military and political mechanisms which are designed to undermine the Asean-centric security and stability framework for the Asia-Pacific region”, it said.

Wang hailed ties with Russia as “mature, stable, resilient and autonomous, with solid political mutual trust, deepening strategic cooperation and broad prospects for mutually beneficial cooperation”, according to a readout by China’s foreign ministry.

“In the face of the chaotic international situation and external interference and resistance, China is willing to work with Russia … to safeguard the core interests of each other, and always be a fellow traveller and a good partner in each other’s development,” Wang was quoted by the readout as saying.

The two sides should also “maintain communication and coordination on East Asian cooperation”, he added.

Earlier, the duo joined Laotian Foreign Minister Saleumxay Kommasith in a meeting in which the three sides “expressed concerns over extraterritorial forces fanning the flames in the Asia-Pacific region”, according to China’s foreign ministry.

The three countries were “willing to strengthen coordination and cooperation to promote the cooling of hotspot issues and the maintenance of regional security and stability and … will work together to oppose power politics and confrontation.”

Top diplomats from the 10-member states of Asean are being joined by Wang and Lavrov as well as counterparts from the US, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Britain and the European Union in the Laotian capital until Saturday for the annual East Asia Summit foreign ministers’ meeting.

It is held as tensions have mounted in the South China Sea, the strategically important waterway and a crucial trade route where four Asean members – Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei – are locked in maritime disputes with China over territorial claims.

Indonesia, another Asean member, is cautious about China’ presence in the South China Sea, as the archipelagic state’s exclusive economic zone in the North Natuna Sea falls within China’s so-called nine-dash line, which Beijing uses to claim much of the waters.

However, friction in the South China Sea has been more intense between Beijing and Manila after Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. moved his nation closer to the US and sought stronger cooperation with other US allies, such as Japan and Australia.

This year, confrontation between the Philippines and China has sharply escalated, with the Chinese coastguard accused of using water cannons and dangerous manoeuvres to block Philippine resupply missions to the disputed Second Thomas Shoal, a submerged reef in the Spratly Islands.

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Why Russia might be warming to China’s presence in Central Asia

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Manila grounded the ageing warship, BRP Sierra Madre, on the shoal in 1999 and has stationed troops there to assert its claims over the area. Beijing said only humanitarian supplies and no construction materials were allowed.

Earlier, the US suggested it would do “what is necessary” to support resupply missions, though Philippine officials have turned down offers from the US, insisting the operations should be purely Philippine.

Last week, after a series of meetings, Beijing and Manila said they had reached a temporary deal to prevent stand-offs escalating around the Sierra Madre, but there was soon disagreement, with Manila objecting to Beijing’s conditions of prior notification and on-site verification.

During the Cold War, Moscow was active in Southeast Asia and supported nationalist movements in the region, particularly with military and economic aid to Vietnam and Laos.

In 1979, four years after the fall of Saigon marked the end of the Vietnam war, the Soviet government signed an agreement for a 25-year lease of Cam Ranh Bay in southeastern Vietnam as a naval base to project Soviet power in Southeast Asia. In 2002, the Russian military pulled out from the base.