Washington: US President Joe Biden will step up his efforts to counterbalance China through coordination with like-minded countries on Friday, as he takes part in a first-of-its-kind summit with the leaders of Australia, India and Japan.
"I believe that the leaders tomorrow in their private discussion will be open about some of the concerns they have. And I do believe that there will be an honest, open discussion about China's role on the global stage," the official added.
President Biden will be present in the State Dining Room at the White House along with Vice President Kamala Harris and some of the key members of his staff and cabinet.
Secretary of State Antony J Blinken will serve as the moderator, while National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan will be there at the table to support President Biden in this summit.
Read:|Hope 1st QUAD summit is conducive to regional peace, 'not the opposite': China
The virtual meeting marks the first summit since the idea for the grouping of the four major democracies was conceived in 2004, in response to the devastation of an earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean.
In 2007, the countries aligned to tout a vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific but were largely inactive amid pressure from China. Starting from President Bush, followed by President Barack Obama and then President Donald Trump, the Quad has historically enjoyed bipartisan support in the United States.
However, with President Biden making the Quad summit his earliest multilateral engagement speaks to the importance the United States places in the Indo-Pacific.
"President Biden wants to put his stamp on this at the leader level and that's why he summons the capacity of the US government, our determination to apply our strategic ingenuity," the senior administration official told reporters.
"All of us (Quad countries) have been subjected to cyber-attacks and I think there is a desire to explore areas where we can improve digital hygiene compare notes more generally think a little bit about best global practices is also the case that each of these countries is acutely interested in standards-setting for 5G and other global technologies that are going to be critical in the 21st century," the official added.