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Biden eyes Asia challenges in Singapore PM’s visit


Published : 29 Mar 2022 09:35 PM

US President Joe Biden, back from a high-stakes trip to Europe focused on Russia's war against Ukraine, hosts the prime minister of Singapore Tuesday in a chance to address crucial US  challenges across Asia. 

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will meet Biden in the Oval Office at 10:35  am (1435 GMT), and the two leaders will later make a joint media appearance. 

The get-together will hand Biden a welcome opportunity to delve into  Washington's long-touted "pivot to Asia." "We are very happy" to host Lee, a senior US official said, "because we  believe that the US-Singapore strategic partnership is extremely strong and  valuable to both countries, and it has supported peace and prosperity  throughout the Indo-Pacific." 

The Biden administration has repeatedly characterized the Asia-Pacific  region, and particularly the rise of communist China, as the number one  strategic issue for the United States. 

The world's two biggest economies are at loggerheads over trade, human  rights and, more broadly, what Biden often portrays as a defining struggle in  the 21st century between the globe's autocracies and democracies. 

But concerns about China have been pushed to the back burner by the  emergency in Europe, where Russia's military is in its second month of  attacking neighboring, pro-Western Ukraine in a crisis more reminiscent of  the Cold War. Even the alarming acceleration of North Korea's nuclear program --  including testing an intercontinental ballistic missile last week -- has been  overshadowed by Russian President Vladimir Putin's bloody campaign. 

- Ukraine invasion looms - 

Inevitably, when Lee meets Biden, Ukraine will loom large.   

Singapore announced in February it was joining other pro-Western powers in  imposing sanctions on Russia, including blocking financial transactions. The wealthy city-state rarely sanctions other countries without UN  backing, but Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishnan cited the  "unprecedented gravity" of the crisis. 

   "The president and prime minister will be meeting at a very critical time,  one in which the rules-based international order faces (an) unprecedented  challenge," the US official told reporters on condition of anonymity. 

Russia's attack on Ukraine, which Putin says he wants to "demilitarize,"  has deeply shocked US allies beyond Europe, including Australia and Japan.