Sydney: Expressing concern over the on-going trade spats between China and the United States, Australia has said that it was hurting smaller countries and threatening the global economy.
In an usually public warning to allies in Washington, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the "world's most important bilateral relationship -- the US-China relationship" had become "strained".
"Trade tensions have escalated. The collateral damage is spreading. The global trading system is under real pressure. Global growth projections are being wound back," he said, speaking in Sydney.
"The impact of any further deterioration of the relationship will not be limited to these two major powers," he added.
His comments come on the eve of a G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, that will be overshadowed by talks between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US counterpart Donald Trump aimed at easing tensions between the world's two largest economic powers.
Decades of cautious engagement between China and the United States have been cast aside in the Trump-Xi era, replaced by two geopolitical behemoths openly tussling for economic, diplomatic and military influence.
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In Australia, that has caused a dramatic erosion in confidence about both Washington's and Beijing's willingness to act responsibly in the world.