Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who has warmed once-frosty relations with China, hosts his counterparts in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations on Saturday. The summits have spotlighted the escalating conflicts involving four ASEAN member states, Taiwan and China in recent years.
A draft of the "chairman's statement" to be issued at the end of the summit obtained today by The Associated Press, however, does not mention an arbitration decision last year that invalidated China's claims to the strategic waterway and expresses serious concerns only "by some leaders" over the "escalation of activities in the area."
The 20-page draft devotes fewer paragraphs and repeats language of concern already used in past ASEAN communiques. The statement issued by Laos last year, when it led the 10- nation regional bloc, had a longer discussion of the territorial rifts and expressed concerns over "land reclamations," a reference to China's newly built islands in the disputed waters, although it did not mention the Asian superpower by name. Laos is an ally of China.
Washington has remained one of the most vocal critics of China's increasingly assertive actions in the disputed waters, including its construction of seven islands in the South China Sea's hotly contested Spratly archipelago. The U.S. Navy has continued patrols it says are aimed at ensuring freedom of navigation and overflight in one of the world's busiest commercial sea lanes.
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