U.S. Not ‘Turning Back’ on Asian Allies, but Expects Greater Defence Spending, Hegseth Says
World 10:14 AM - 2026-05-30
AAP
U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.
The U.S. military are not "turning our backs" on Asia while fulfilling "global obligations" such as the Iran war, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has told a top regional defence forum in Singapore.
Hegseth sought to reassure Asia-Pacific allies about U.S. commitment to the region, including fulfilling arms deals in the wake of a suspended Taiwan weapons package - even as he reiterated calls for Asian partners to spend more on defence.
While noting the threat of China's military build-up in the region, Hegseth also said the U.S. wanted to avoid "needless confrontation".
Hegseth was speaking weeks after U.S. President Donald Trump held positive talks with China's President Xi Jinping in Beijing.
At the Shangri-La Dialogue on Saturday, Hegseth was asked by Japan's defence minister to address concerns about U.S. commitment. Japan's defence minister Shinjiro Koizumi said "some countries might underestimate" that level of commitment and may want to "drive a wedge" between the U.S. and its allies.
Hegseth replied that part of the U.S. national defence strategy was aimed at "power projection" in the Pacific and working with allies.
"People want to conflate that we have global obligations with the turning of our backs to this region," he said, denying that was the case.
"We can do two things at one time," he insisted, saying the U.S. was "quietly but very strongly" working with allies with a "substantive, serious approach" to the Pacific, while maintaining "global obligations to ensure that, say, Iran doesn't get a nuclear weapon".
Separately, a dialogue participant raised the question of the U.S.'s ability to fulfil arms deals with its partners after suspending a $14bn (£10bn) package to Taiwan in order to conserve munitions for the war in Iran.
Hegseth said he would "very much decouple the two" issues, insisting the US was in a "very good place... very strong position" in terms of its overall munitions stockpile and ability to produce more if needed.
In his speech, Hegseth emphasised the U.S.'s "strong, quiet and clear" approach to the region - its capacity to wield a "big stick" but "speak softly".
Central to this approach was more weapons, he insisted, instead of "empty globalist rhetoric about the rules-based international order".
"Rules are great, but if you can't back them up with hard power, the rules are not worth the paper they are written on," he said. "We don't need more conferences, we need more combat power… less Shangri-La Dialogue, more ships and more subs."
His comments came hours after Vietnam's President To Lam called for more dialogue to resolve tensions in the region, in the defence summit's keynote speech.
Reiterating a demand which he made in last year's speech, Hegseth called on Asian allies to spend more on defence, setting 3.5% of their GDP as a target.
He heaped praise on countries who have in recent months increased military spending and co-operation with the US, namechecking allies such as South Korea, Japan, Australia, and Philippines among others.
Hegseth also criticised "freeloaders", categorising New Zealand as such in response to a question later, while warning that "Europe and Nato have some big decisions to make".
Speaking weeks after the Xi-Trump summit, where President Xi had warned that Taiwan was the biggest issue between the two countries, Hegseth was notably softer in tone on China and did not mention Taiwan except in answer to a question.
It stood in contrast to his speech at last year's conference, where he accused Beijing of posing an "imminent threat" to Taiwan.
This year, Hegseth said that while there is "rightful alarm regarding China's historic military buildup", the U.S. also understood that its allies in Asia "do not seek constant escalation" and instead want a balance of power "in which no state including China can impose its hegemony".
The U.S. wants "a genuinely stable equilibrium" and wants to "preserve the conditions that have long underwritten peace and prosperity in this region", he added. "We do not approach this challenge with needless confrontation but with the posture of measured and deliberate strength."
The forum, organised by think tank the International Institute of Strategic Studies, has traditionally been anchored by the U.S. and China. It is seen as a key mechanism for Asian countries to hold direct defence and security talks with the superpowers.
But this is the second year in a row that China has declined to send its defence minister, instead choosing to send a lower-level delegation. Some have interpreted that as a snub to the forum, while others see it as China avoiding publicly pitting itself against the U.S., as the two rival powers jostle for influence in the region.
Source: BBC
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