US and Chinese military representatives met in Hawaii this week to discuss the safety of forces in the Pacific, marking the first in-person meeting of its kind in years after cancellations by China.
The Military Maritime Consultative Agreement Working Group meeting was held in Honolulu on Wednesday and Thursday this week. Eighteen officials from China’s People’s Liberation Army attended, alongside 18 representatives from the US military’s major commands in the Pacific, including officials from US Indo-Pacific command, US Pacific Fleet, and US Pacific Air Forces.
A senior US military official told reporters this week that the talks in Hawaii were “critical to ensuring the safe operation of our military force.”
“Both of us owe it to our service members to ensure that we operate safely,” the official said, adding that this was the “first of the operational safety types of conversations we’ve had because of the cancellations by the PRC in the past couple of years.”
This week’s meeting was the first to follow President Joe Biden’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2023, when the two leaders committed to maintaining military-to-military communication. This week was also the first in-person meeting in years, as the last MMCA event in December 2021 was held virtually.
The MMCA meetings between the US and China have been happening since 1998.
Biden and Xi also spoke on the phone on Tuesday, discussing various topics like countering narcotics, artificial intelligence, and climate change. It also served as a “check in” on the November conversations, which included discussions about the military-to-military relationship between the two countries, a senior administration official told CNN.
In January, US and Chinese…
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