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As China rises in Indo-Pacific, US must avoid ‘devastating’ budget cuts: senior diplomat
- But Republican lawmakers question whether funds are being spent effectively to counter Beijing’s ‘malign influence’
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Mark Magnierin New York
Substantial budget cuts could ruin American overtures in the Indo-Pacific region as China’s military footprint and diplomatic muscle expand rapidly, a senior Biden administration official told the US Congress on Thursday.
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“These cuts would be devastating … to our ability to stand up to China, devastating to our ability to continue to offer alternatives to our partners,” said Daniel Kritenbrink, the State Department’s assistant secretary handling East Asian and Pacific affairs.
“It causes [us] potentially to have to reduce our staffing and presence in the region at a time we should be stepping it up,” he added in testimony before the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the Indo-Pacific.
As tensions mount in the region, including most recently in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea around the Philippines, Washington has sought to raise its profile.
Over the past year, it has added embassies in the Solomon Islands and Tonga, while planning on opening another in Vanuatu and hoping further out to open a fourth in Kiribati.
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