Two prominent US senators on Tuesday expressed alarm about the military and political consequences if China gains control of a port terminal in Djibouti, and said they were concerned it could further boost Beijing’s influence in East Africa.
In a letter to US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Defense James Mattis, Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican, and Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat, said they were concerned about Djibouti’s termination of a contract for the Doraleh Container Terminal with United Arab Emirates-based DP World in February and the nationalization of the port in September.
Reports that Djibouti, heavily indebted to Beijing, would likely cede the port’s operations to a Chinese state-owned enterprise were “even more alarming,” they said.
The letter was the latest in a series of efforts by members of the US Congress who want to counter China’s growing international influence, which they see as a threat to US economic and security interests.
Trump has been focusing on the economic threat from China and has brought the two countries to the brink of a trade war, but many lawmakers want to ensure the administration also treats the country as a security threat.
A tiny nation strategically located at the entrance to the Red Sea on the route to the Suez Canal, Djibouti became home to China’s first overseas military base last year. A US base located just kilometers away stages operations against the Islamic State group, al-Qaeda and other militant groups.
Rubio and Coons sent Tuesday’s letter as lawmakers returned to the US Capitol for the first time in several weeks after the congressional elections on Nov. 6.
Asked for comment, a Pentagon spokesman said the US Department of Defense welcomed infrastructure and other investment that could benefit the region, but added “countries should be wary of piling on monumental debt.”
A US Department of State spokesman had no response.
The US Senate last month passed legislation overhauling the way the federal government lends money for foreign development, in a shift meant largely as a response to Chinese influence.
US officials say they worry about what they call China’s “debt trap” diplomacy, in which countries end up giving up control of major assets, such as ports or roadways, when they fund infrastructure projects with Chinese loans that they cannot pay back.
US Marine Corps General Thomas Waldhauser, the top US military officer for Africa, told a congressional hearing earlier this year that the US military could face “significant” consequences if China took the port in Djibouti.
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