Beijing: The US-Japan alliance could be the ideal starting point for incoming US President-elect Joe Biden's administration to rebuild strategic, economic, technological and governing norms and to counter China's growing ambitions, according to analysts and ex-US officials.
Although the US shares a growing interest with Europe, Canada, Southeast Asia and Australia in countering various parts of China's plans for global expansion, analysts say that none across all these areas are as much of a natural fit as Washington and Tokyo, reported South China Morning Post.
"When the US and Japan work together, we can shape the environment in which Chinese power increases... Our alliance [is] going well beyond security ... in technology and economic assistance, the infrastructure to counter the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative [BRI], you'll see that Japanese leadership is crucial," said Joseph Nye, former US assistant secretary of defence and former dean of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.
Former US deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage, now president of consulting firm Armitage International, and Nye spoke at a Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) event in conjunction with a report the think tank published on Monday.
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Armitage opined that the Biden administration will not be going soft on China, adding that people mentioned for assistant secretary jobs in the Pentagon and the State Department are the hardest liners on China.