Live Thursday, 18 June 2026
BREAKING
Egyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian CounterpartEgyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian Counterpart
Prices
US dollar49.93EGPEuro57.68EGPBritish pound66.74EGPSaudi riyal13.31EGPUAE dirham13.60EGPKuwaiti dinar162.35EGPJordanian dinar70.42EGPQatari riyal13.72EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.37EGPGold 246,926.96EGP/gGold 216,061.09EGP/gGold 185,195.22EGP/gSilver111.02EGP/g
US dollar49.93EGPEuro57.68EGPBritish pound66.74EGPSaudi riyal13.31EGPUAE dirham13.60EGPKuwaiti dinar162.35EGPJordanian dinar70.42EGPQatari riyal13.72EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.37EGPGold 246,926.96EGP/gGold 216,061.09EGP/gGold 185,195.22EGP/gSilver111.02EGP/g
NEWS BREAKING
Politics

Asia reckons with China as Trump pulls back

SINGAPORE — The American retreat from the global stage hit home in Asia this week, as the U.S. increasingly demands that regional allies fend for themselves against China’s surging military power.

The shift toward a Trumpian style of arm-twisting diplomacy was laid bare at this year’s IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, traditionally a forum for the U.S. and its partners to air their grievances with China — and project a unified front against Beijing.

But this year, Trump administration officials underscored that Asia needs to take the lead in the region, mirroring America’s tough love approach toward Europe as the U.S. focuses on the Western Hemisphere — and insists that allies pay their own way on national defense.

“The era of the United States subsidizing the defense of wealthy nations is over,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said during his keynote address, as he exhorted allies to get “some skin in the game” by upping their defense spending to 3.5 percent of GDP.

But he was largely silent on Beijing, only going as far as to validate the region’s “rightful alarm” with China. So American allies kept quiet, too, as they try to forge their own path ahead — and reckon with a future where they can no longer rely on the U.S. for protection against China’s expanding influence.

“It’s a very delicate dance for us and everyone knows it can’t last forever,” said one regional official, who, like others interviewed for this story, was granted anonymity to provide a candid view of the alliance. “Everyone is still giving voice to platitudes of being confident in the U.S. as an ally, but behind closed doors, contemplation of a post-American region has become more serious.”

Japan’s Defense Minister Shinjirō Koizumi said he wanted to sit down with his Chinese counterpart and that Tokyo’s historic defense spending boost wasn’t aimed at anyone in particular. Philippine defense chief Gilberto Teodoro Jr. — one of the region’s most ardent China critics — ducked through a working kitchen to avoid a throng of Chinese reporters. And Dutch Defense Minister Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius said she feared “international rules being violated” but didn’t say who broke them.

Southeast Asia just didn’t want any problems. “The world has enough trouble,” said Singaporean Defense Minister Chan Chun Sing. “If [the region] can stay out of trouble, we will distinguish ourselves.” And just a few years after fighting Chinese soldiers in hand-to-hand combat in the Himalayas, India is focused on patching things up with Beijing, according to one European diplomat in the country.

Hegseth’s defenders argued that the Trump administration is still upholding the status quo — privately protesting Chinese island building, trying to kick start arms control talks, and yes, standing up for Taiwan — even if they’re not doing it out loud. “We’re going to be discreet about those things,” said Rep. Pat Harrigan (R-N.C.), a Trump ally.

Officials from 46 nations braved frosty American rhetoric and sweltering Singapore heat for three days, leaving many with a sense that the ground was shifting beneath their feet.

“The allies, especially Australia and Japan, appear to be trying their best to work together and fill in the gaps in security left by U.S. inattention and show they are shouldering their responsibilities,” said Ian Chong, a National University of Singapore professor. “Others are talking a big game over the rule of law and institutions but are neither holding the U.S. to account nor demanding more from [China].”

America’s so-called hub-and-spoke relationship with a handful of treaty allies in Asia has been messy in the best of times. But as delegates crammed into 80 bilateral meetings, they expressed a sense that the world was “fragmenting,” as Italian Adm. Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, NATO’s most senior European military official put it during a panel discussion.

Some allies were desperate to pull the U.S. back into the fold. Koizumi, the Japanese defense chief, publicly urged Hegseth to signal a more solid U.S. commitment to the region after his remarks.

Australia’s push to unveil a public announcement for undersea drone enablers for the AUKUS alliance — the trilateral pact between the U.S., the U.K., and Canberra to share submarine technology and other advanced hardware — “smacked of anxiety,” the regional official said.

Others urged Asia to play for time, particularly given the ongoing turmoil in China’s military. Beijing didn’t send its defense minister to the gathering for the second straight year.

European officials preached resilience, a watchword for defending their societies by themselves if the U.S. military doesn’t show up to help immediately — or at all.

“Everyone is currently recognizing there are no guarantees of U.S. action on Taiwan under Trump,” said a former regional official. The mood was “thankful that the continuing PLA purges make clear Xi does not yet have confidence in the PLA’s ability to deliver.”

But while Beijing’s purge has ensnared as many as 100 of China’s top military brass, it did little to stop the emerging superpower from throwing its weight around at the conference.

While Hegseth and Koizumi called for direct talks with China, Chinese academics and lower-level military officers that did show up in Singapore didn’t return their courtesy.

One Chinese academic directly confronted the top U.S. four-star general in South Korea in front of Hegseth over recent comments that the American ally was a “dagger” in Asia aimed at China. And a Chinese military officer asked Koizumi to issue an apology for victims of World War II.

In one of the world’s wealthiest countries full of posh private clubs and badminton courts, an increasingly brash China felt no compunction to play nice.

“China itself doesn’t feel obliged to observe these diplomatic niceties,” said a former U.S. official. “It may not be wolf warrior diplomacy but it’s fuck you diplomacy.”

المصدر: Politico

0 Views

أضف تعليقاً

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *