Viet Nam Harvests the Benefits of a Wind Farm and Strong Private Sector Partnership

Electricity demand in Viet Nam is expected to grow at 8% annually through to 2030. Meeting this demand will require increasing power generation capacity and developing more renewable sources of energy. Building the infrastructure to generate and transmit the extra energy capacity will require significant amounts of financing and strong collaboration.

ADB arranged and syndicated a $173 million green loan to finance the Lotus Wind Project. It is a milestone project for PC1 Group Joint Stock Company (PC1 Group), one of Viet Nam’s largest renewable power plant developers, and for its partner, RENOVA, Inc. a Japanese renewable energy developer.

The project is expected to generate an average of 422 gigawatt-hours of electricity and avoid an average of 162,430 tons of CO2 emissions annually – helping to diversify Viet Nam’s energy mix and supporting its efforts to meet climate action goals.

Source: Asian Development Bank

New South Korean President Stresses Freedom in Speech Aligned with US Policy

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol used the Korean word meaning “freedom” 35 times during his first speech in office, aligning his administration with U.S. President Joe Biden’s foreign policy centered on human rights and building a coalition of liberal democratic nations, according to experts.

“The most important core value is freedom,” Yoon said on Tuesday, and it is “paramount” for South Korea and other countries that share the value of liberal democracy to meet multiple challenges around the world, including food and energy crises, global supply chain issues and armed conflicts.

Bruce Klinger, former CIA deputy division chief of Korea and current senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, said, “Yoon’s speech reflected his intention to have foreign policies based on principles of freedom, democracy, human rights and adherence to norms of international behavior.”

He continued, “He has made clear that, unlike his predecessor, Moon Jae-in, he will not avoid [criticizing] North Korea and Chinese human rights abuses, violations of U.N. resolutions and encroachments on the sovereignty of other nations,” referring to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

South Korea is surrounded by the autocratic countries of North Korea, China and Russia. Seoul embraced a democratic form of government when a 1953 armistice agreement ended the fighting of the Korean War.

Evans Revere, a former State Department official with extensive experience negotiating with North Korea, said Yoon used his speech to convey a message to North Korea, China and Russia that Seoul will challenge those nations on the disregard for liberal democratic principles, including human rights.

“President Yoon’s speech strongly affirmed South Korea’s solidarity with the United States and other free, democratic countries,” Revere said.

“His remarks sent a clear message to authoritarian and totalitarian leaders in Beijing, Moscow and Pyongyang about how South Korea plans to align itself as liberal democracies push back against those powers who reject democracy and freedom,” Revere said.

Soo Kim, former CIA analyst and current policy analyst at the Rand Corporation, said Yoon’s speech was “alluding to both freedom in South Korea and abroad.”

She said, “Abroad, we are seeking democracy and the rule of law being threatened in Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. The friction between the U.S. and China also represents a juxtaposition between the two systems” of liberal democracy and autocracy.

Kim added, “At home, South Korea is also facing challenges in addressing civil liberties, most notably through some of the controversial laws pushed by the Moon administration.”

Moon was criticized for largely ignoring human rights violations in North Korea and China in his quest to achieve inter-Korean reconciliation with Beijing’s support but without upsetting Pyongyang.

Moon’s peace initiative often ran counter to the Biden administration’s efforts to rally its democratic ally to counter North Korea’s threat involving weapons tests and China’s military aggressions in the Indo-Pacific.

During the Moon government, South Korea’s parliament passed a law in December 2020 that banned South Korean activists from releasing balloons containing anti-Pyongyang leaflets into North Korea as Seoul tried to engage its northern neighbor in his peace initiative.

Robert King, who served as the special envoy for North Korean human rights issues during the Obama administration, said, “Based on [his] inauguration speech, I believe the Yoon administration will play a positive role” in human rights of North Korea. He added, “Ignoring human rights in the hope that North Korea would engage with South Korea has not worked.”

Harry Kazianis, president and CEO of the developing think tank Rogue States Project, said, “Yoon will advocate for human rights to be at the center of his foreign policy agenda.” He sees Yoon “willing to call out press freedom abuses, human suffering and lack of basic human rights in any nations he wishes – especially in North Korea.”

According to Patricia Kim, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, however, Yoon’s approach toward foreign policy based on democratic values will meet opposition.

“A shift toward a more value-based diplomacy will undoubtedly create friction between South Korea and its autocratic neighbors,” Kim said. “The Yoon administration will have to make tough policy choices in the years ahead while dealing with domestic economic difficulties, an ever-growing North Korean threat, and great power rivalry in the Indo-Pacific and European theaters.”

VOA’s Korean Service contacted the Chinese Embassy in Washington and North Korea’s Mission to the U.N. in New York City for comments on Yoon’s speech. Neither responded.

Yoon’s “freedom” speech came at a time of intense tensions on the Korean Peninsula as North Korea is ratcheting up the development and testing of its nuclear and missile programs while continuing to deprive its citizens of human rights such as the freedoms of speech, press and religion.

North Korea has conducted 16 rounds of weapons tests since January, including the latest three short-range ballistic missiles Seoul said Pyongyang launched on Thursday evening.

North Korea, which has rejected offers of COVID-19 vaccines, confirmed the first acknowledged cases of the omicron variant of the virus in the country this week.

Pyongyang said over 18,000 people show symptoms of COVID-19 as the country went into a strict emergency lockdown.

Just a day later, the official Korean Central News Agency said that six people had died, one of whom “tested positive for the BA.2 subvariant of Omicron.” The KCNA also said Friday that nearly 190,000 people were “being isolated and treated.”

Source: Voice of America

Public Schedule – May 13, 2022

SECRETARY ANTONY J. BLINKEN

9:00 a.m. Secretary Blinken meets with Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi at the Department of State.

(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY AT TOP)

The camera spray will be live-streamed on www.state.gov and www.youtube.com/statedept.

10:15 a.m. Secretary Blinken meets with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh in Washington, D.C.

(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY AT TOP)

The camera spray will be live-streamed on www.state.gov and www.youtube.com/statedept.

2:15 p.m. Secretary Blinken meets with Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn at the Department of State.

(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY AT TOP)

The camera spray will be live-streamed on www.state.gov and www.youtube.com/statedept.

DEPUTY SECRETARY WENDY R. SHERMAN

9:30 a.m. Deputy Secretary Sherman meets with Lao Foreign Minister Saleumxay Kommasith at the Department of State.

(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

10:15 a.m. Deputy Secretary Sherman meets with ASEAN Secretary General Lim Jock HOI at the Department of State.

(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:00 a.m. Deputy Secretary Sherman meets with Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan at the Department of State.

(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:30 a.m. Deputy Secretary Sherman joins Vice President Harris for the ASEAN leaders working lunch at the Department of State.

(MEDIA DETERMINED BY THE WHITE HOUSE)

3:30 p.m. Deputy Secretary Sherman joins President Biden’s participation in the U.S.-ASEAN Special Summit at the Department of State.

(MEDIA DETERMINED BY THE WHITE HOUSE)

DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR MANAGEMENT AND RESOURCES BRIAN P. MCKEON

Deputy Secretary McKeon has no public appointments.

UNDER SECRETARY FOR POLITICAL AFFAIRS VICTORIA J. NULAND

Under Secretary Nuland is on travel to Morocco, France, and Germany from May 9-15, 2022. Please click here for more information.

UNDER SECRETARY FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT JOSE W. FERNANDEZ

Under Secretary Fernandez is on travel to South Africa and Zambia from May 9-13, 2022. Please click here for more information.

ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS LEE A. SATTERFIELD

Assistant Secretary Satterfield is on travel to Pennsylvania.

ACTING ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS YAEL LEMPERT

Acting Assistant Secretary Lempert is on travel to Morocco and Tunisia from May 10-14, 2022. Please click here for more information.

BRIEFING SCHEDULE

No Department Press Briefing.

Source: US State Department

Secretary Antony J. Blinken and Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi Before Their Meeting

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Good morning, everyone. It’s a real pleasure to be here with my friend and colleague, the foreign minister of Indonesia. Retno, thank you for being here, but thank you more broadly for Indonesia’s remarkable leadership. We just had – we’re still having what is truly a historic summit between the United States and ASEAN. And the success of this effort is in no small measure due to Indonesia’s leadership as our country coordinator, but also as the leader of ASEAN. I know from speaking to President Biden that the meetings have been already a significant success. And it just puts an emphasis on the great importance that we attach, the United States attaches to ASEAN, our relationship, ASEAN centrality. But so much of this is due to Indonesia’s leadership.

We are working together across the board to advance a shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region. We’re working to strengthen economic ties among countries in the region. We’re working together to deal with global challenges, like COVID-19. Just yesterday at the summit that the President was also convening, I had the opportunity to do a session with your health minister about how we can strengthen the global health security system for the future. So here, again, Indonesia is playing a leadership role.

We have a lot to talk about, including the situation in Myanmar and other occupations, but I think most important is that what I’ve seen over the last year and a half is a increasingly strong relationship, partnership between our countries, for which the United States is truly appreciative. So welcome. It’s great to have you.

FOREIGN MINISTER MARSUDI: Well, thank you very much, Secretary Blinken. Thank you very much, Tony. It’s very – I feel so glad to be back to D.C. again, and this time is for the ASEAN-U.S. Summit. And I’m also very glad that we are able to have separately a bilateral meeting to discuss various issues of bilateral relation as well as regional and global issue.

U.S. and Indonesia are strategic partner. With this strategic partnership, I am very glad to see intensified communication and cooperation between our two countries. And we should use this strategic partnership also to contribute to the peace, stability, and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific.

So, I also hope to see synergy between the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework with implementation of cooperation under the ASEAN Outlook on the Indo-Pacific.

On the global issue, I would like to reiterate the very consistent of the principle of Indonesia on the importance of respecting territorial integrity and sovereignty of a country to another country. So, this principle is upheld by Indonesia very consistently.

Our hope is to see the war in Ukraine stop as soon as possible, and we give the peaceful resolution of a conflict a chance to succeed. Because we know that if the war continues, all of us will suffer.

And finally, looking forward to welcoming you on the foreign ministers meeting of the G20 in July 2022 in Bali.

So once again, thank you very much.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Thank you very much, everyone.

FOREIGN MINISTER MARSUDI: Thank you.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Come on in.

Source: US State Department

Secretary Antony J. Blinken and Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh Before Their Meeting

SECRETARY BLINKEN: It’s very good to be with you, and thank you, Prime Minister, for being here. I just wanted to say at the outset that we have seen a remarkable trajectory in the relationship between the United States and Vietnam, and we are now the strongest of partners, with a shared vision for security in the region we share and for the strongest possible economic ties. And, of course, the United States very much supports a strong, independent, prosperous Vietnam. We’re so glad to have you here, Mr. Prime Minister, for this extraordinary ASEAN meeting but also on a bilateral basis, so welcome and thank you for being here.

PRIME MINISTER CHINH: (Via interpreter) Well, thank you very much for taking the time to come here and have a working session with me and my delegation. Why I mentioned the mask – it is my congratulations to you for being very successful curbing – (laughter) – curbing the pandemic and to prepare for the recovery and the reopening up, and to realize the goal that you have set out.

And we are very grateful to the support of the international community, including the U.S., especially for the donation of vaccines and health care equipment. At the moment, we have been able to put the pandemic under control, just like the U.S. And during the visit by Vice President Kamala Harris, we asked her for the vaccines, and she – upon coming back, she has worked with President Biden and the work has been very effective with regard to the vaccine, and we are very thankful.

And through the COVID-19 pandemic, we see that global issues or whole-of-people issues requires global approach, and international solidarity, and the promotion of multilateralism. And it is very important that we address the issues that are – that concern the whole of people. It (inaudible), but I’m being very sincere here with you…

Source: US State Department

Malaysian Pm Meets President Biden, Asean Leaders At White House

WASHINGTON D.C— Malaysian Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob met with United States (US) President Joe Biden and ASEAN leaders at the White House on Thursday (Friday in Malaysia).

President Biden hosted in-person the leaders of ASEAN for a two-day ASEAN-US Special Summit here starting Thursday.

The historic meeting is seen as the starting point to bringing a positive impact to the diplomatic, trade and economic relations of Malaysia.

Ismail Sabri also stressed the stand of ASEAN in ASEAN-US cooperation at the summit apart from hoping that the special summit would be the strategic cornerstone for ASEAN and US to study and explore pragmatic cooperation to strengthen the existing ties.

Ismail Sabri also joined Biden and ASEAN leaders for a group photo at the compound of the White House.

This is the second time such a summit with Southeast Asian leaders is hosted by an American President in the US.

In February 2016, then-president Barack Obama welcomed ASEAN leaders in Sunnylands, California.

Other ASEAN leaders spotted at the White House were Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei, Indonesian President Joko Widodo, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore and Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-Cha, Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and Laos Prime Minister Dr Phankham Viphavanh were also in attendance.

The Philippines which is currently holding its general election is represented by its Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr.

There is no representative from Myanmar, a country under junta rule following the Feb 1, 2021 coup.

It was reported earlier that Biden administration has set it as a top priority to serve as a strong, reliable partner in Southeast Asia.

In the previous virtual ASEAN-US Summit in October last year, Biden announced US$102 million in a new initiative to expand its engagement with ASEAN.

It covers COVID-19 recovery, health, security, fighting the climate change crisis, stimulating broad-based economic growth and deepening people-to-people ties.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK