Rovaniemi, Finland: The Trump administration warned China and Russia on Monday that the US won't stand for aggressive moves in the Arctic region, which is rapidly opening up to development and commerce as temperatures warm and sea ice melts.
In a speech in Finland, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the US will compete for influence in the Arctic and counter attempts to make it the strategic preserve of any one or two nations.
He said the rule of law must prevail for the Arctic to remain peaceful and slammed both China and Russia for what he said were coercive practices that would destabilize the "high North" if repeated.
"The region has become an arena for power and for competition and the eight Arctic states must adapt to this new future," Pompeo said in the speech, delivered a day before he participates in a meeting of foreign minister from the Arctic Council.
He said the council had once been able to focus solely on non-controversial scientific, environmental and cultural issues but that the profound changes in the Arctic's environment and strategic rivalries no longer offered that luxury.
"We're entering a new age of strategic engagement in the Arctic, complete with new threats to the Arctic and its real estate and to all of our interest in that region," he said.
For the US he said that means boosting America's security and diplomatic presence with new military exercises, icebreakers and expanded Coast Guard Operations.