"We're using the US Navy to maintain that freedom of travel through those international waterways," said Sebastian Gorka, the Deputy Assistant to President Donald Trump and key member of his national security and foreign policy team.
He was referring to the freedom of navigation in the disputed South China Sea.
China claims almost all of the South China Sea, including islands more than 800 miles from the Chinese mainland, despite objections from neighbours such as the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam.
"Unlike the last administration, we don't give all of our play book away. So there are lots of things that we are doing and will do, but like as someone playing poker, you don't show the other people at the table your hand, and exactly the same happens right now with regard to those that challenge the international order," he said responding to a question.
Also Read
Gorka asserted that in the first six months, the Trump administration have been sending clear message to China through various actions.
"The idea that they're creating search and rescue bases on these fake Atolls, but instead creating real military bases, that's not good for anybody," Gorka said.
He also said that the Trump administration has great expectations from China on North Korea and it expects Beijing to exert very considerable, economic, political, and diplomatic pressure on Pyongyang.
Additionally, at the end of the G20, Trump had a conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping to tell him exactly what he thought about what China needs to do right.
"So, look, right now we're going to maintain our policy of peaceful pressure with regards to North Korea, hoping that China can step up to the plate, while the president takes no options off the table," Gorka said.
Gorka said in the diametric opposition to the last Obama administration, the Trump administration has whole heartedly embraced what America stands for. "We don't see the world problems as lying at the feet of American foreign policy or our culture, quite the opposite," he said.
"We say as a Judeo-Christian nation, we are part of western civilization, we want to build our relationships with the world on those immutable values that we see as being objective, whether it's with Israel, whether it's with Poland, the Warsaw speech is seminal, we embrace those values, we say that they are true," he added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content