Xi Jinping and Mike Pence trade barbs in their speeches in Papua New Guinea

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

Asia-Pacific leaders failed to bridge gaping divisions over trade at a summit dominated by a war of words between the US and China as they vie for regional influence.

For the first time, Apec leaders were unable to agree on a formal written declaration, amid sharp differences between the world’s top two economies over the rules of global trade.

“You know the two big giants in the room. What can I say?” said the host, the Papua New Guinean prime minister, Peter O’Neill, conceding defeat.

Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, admitted the failure came down to “different visions on particular elements with regard to trade that prevented full consensus”.

Sources said that going into the meeting the United States had pressed for the leaders to issue what amounted to a denunciation of the World Trade Organization and a call for its wholesale reform.

That demand was a step too far for Beijing, which would be likely to get less preferential treatment under any changes.

O’Neill indicated the WTO had been a sticking point in agreeing a joint communique.

“Apec has got no charter over the World Trade Organization. That is a fact,” he said. “Those matters can be raised at the World Trade Organization.”

The spat ramps up the stakes for a crunch meeting between presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at a G20 summit in Argentina at the end of the month.

A Chinese recession is inevitable - don't think it won't affect you | Kenneth Rogoff Read more

O’Neill denied the failure to agree on a declaration was a humiliation for his poverty-hit country, which was hosting the annual gathering of the 21 nations for the first time.

As tensions boiled over, police were called when Chinese officials attempted to “barge” into the office of PNG’s foreign minister in an 11th-hour bid to influence a draft summit communique, three sources with knowledge of the situation told AFP.

A Chinese foreign ministry official, Zhang Xiaolong, denied the incident, telling reporters: “It’s not true. It’s simply not true.”

Even before the summit started, tensions between the two big hitters came to the fore with Xi and US vice-president Mike Pence crossing swords in competing major policy speeches.

Pence warned smaller countries not to be seduced by China’s massive “belt and road infrastructure programme, which sees Beijing offer money to poorer countries for construction and development projects.

The “opaque” loans come with strings attached and build up “staggering debt”, Pence charged, mocking the initiative as a “constricting belt” and a “one-way road”.

In a speech to business leaders just minutes before Pence, Xi insisted the initiative was not a “trap” and there was no “hidden agenda” – amid criticism that it amounts to chequebook diplomacy in the region.

Xi also lashed out at “America First” trade protectionism, saying it was a “short-sighted approach” that was “doomed to failure”.

Pence told reporters on Sunday: “I spoke to President Xi twice during the course of this conference. We had a candid conversation.”

He told him the US was interested in a better relationship with China “but there has to be change” in Beijing’s trade policies.

Trump and the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, both decided to skip the gathering, leaving the spotlight on Xi, who arrived two days early to open a Chinese-funded school and road in Papua New Guinea’s capital, Port Moresby.

Xi has been the star of the show, front and centre at official photos. Pence, by choice and because he carries a lower rank of protocol, has kept a lower profile, only deciding at the last minute to stay overnight in Port Moresby – shelving original plans to fly in and out from Cairns in Australia.

As if to counter Chinese largesse, on Sunday the US, Australia, New Zealand and Japan announced a project to boost electricity capacity in Papua New Guinea.

'Can they really pull it off?': the Apec summit comes to Papua New Guinea Read more

And as the US and China tussle for influence in the region, the statement announcing the venture dangled the prospect of similar projects for countries that “support principles and values which help maintain and promote a free, open, prosperous and rules-based region”.

With the official business of the summit relatively low-key, much of the focus has been on the unlikely venue of Port Moresby, which is hosting its first international event of this scale.

The city is on lockdown with hundreds of police and military patrolling the streets of the notoriously crime-ridden capital. Warships are stationed just off the coast to provide security for the leaders, and delegates and media have been housed in enormous cruise ships due to a dearth of hotel rooms.