美国警告秘鲁:中国对主要太平洋港口日益增强的控制可能威胁其主权,拉美地区紧张局势升级


美国正警告秘鲁,中国对一个主要太平洋港口日益增强的控制可能威胁该国主权,这使得北京在拉美地区不断扩大影响力的紧张局势进一步升级。

这一担忧集中在利马以北钱凯(Chancay)的一个价值13亿美元的深水港上。在秘鲁一家法院裁定限制了政府对该项目的监管监督后,该港口已成为华盛顿和北京之间的一个爆发点。

美国国务院西半球事务局在社交媒体上表示,该国”对最新报道感到关切,即秘鲁可能无法监督钱凯港——其最大港口之一,该港口由带有掠夺性的中国所有者管辖”,并补充道:”我们支持秘鲁在本国领土上监督关键基础设施的主权权利。这一事件应为该地区和世界敲响警钟:廉价的中国资金会侵蚀主权。”

据美联社报道,中国外交部驳斥这些评论是”造谣和抹黑”,并坚称该项目仍由秘鲁当局管辖。

亚洲分析师戈登·柴(Gordon Chang)告诉福克斯新闻数字版:”钱凯港地理位置极为重要,分析师称它将改变南太平洋的贸易流向。我们知道北京认为港口具有双重用途和战略价值。中国甚至收购了巴拿马运河区黑石集团交易中涉及的港口运营权,尽管这些港口离中国本土远在千里之外。”

“在战争时期,中国将不允许其港口运营为美国船只或往来于美国港口的船只装卸或提供服务,”他警告道。

美国战略与国际研究中心中国项目高级分析师杰克·伯纳姆(Jack Burnham)表示,钱凯港是中国在该地区投资的关键一环——其规模和地理位置提供了横跨太平洋的桥梁,并为北京出口驱动的经济引擎打开了另一个市场。

“北京对秘鲁的投资旨在牢牢掌控利马关键基础设施的命脉以获取影响力。目前秘鲁一家下级法院的裁定已巩固了中国的控制权,使其获得了该地区最大关键基础设施项目之一的准入权,可能借此施加重大影响,”伯纳姆补充说。

分析人士指出,这场争端正值华盛顿与北京在拉美地区展开影响力竞争之际,中国通过基础设施项目和贸易扩大了在该地区的投资。

中国国有航运巨头中远海运(Cosco)持有该项目的多数股权,该公司驳斥了美国的担忧,并表示法院裁定”绝不涉及主权问题”,强调秘鲁当局仍负责安全、环境合规和海关监管,据美联社报道。

秘鲁运输基础设施监管机构Ositran表示,计划对该裁决提出上诉,称该港口不应豁免于其他主要设施的监管标准。

中国驻美国大使馆发言人刘鹏宇向福克斯新闻数字版表示,中国强烈反对所谓的美国”虚假指控和不实信息”,并援引外交部发言人2月12日例行记者会的发言称,钱凯港是中秘”一带一路”的标志性项目,也是南美首个”智慧绿色”港口,第一阶段预计将秘鲁与中国的航运时间缩短至23天,物流成本降低20%以上,每年为秘鲁创造约45亿美元收入,创造8000多个直接就业岗位。刘鹏宇还表示,该项目将加强秘鲁作为连接亚洲和拉丁美洲的区域贸易枢纽作用,并支持更广泛的发展,包括与湿地和沿海栖息地相关的环境倡议。

他补充说,中拉合作基于共同发展目标,惠及双方人民。

美联社对本文报道有贡献。

The United States is warning Peru that China’s growing control over a major Pacific port could threaten the country’s sovereignty, escalating tensions over Beijing’s expanding footprint in Latin America.

The concern centers on the $1.3 billion deep-water port in Chancay, north of Lima, which has become a flashpoint between Washington and Beijing after a Peruvian court ruling limited government regulatory oversight of the project.

The State Department’s Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs said on social media that it was “concerned about latest reports that Peru could be powerless to oversee Chancay, one of its largest ports, which is under the jurisdiction of predatory Chinese owners,” adding: “We support Peru’s sovereign right to oversee critical infrastructure in its own territory. Let this be a cautionary tale for the region and the world: cheap Chinese money costs sovereignty.”

China’s foreign ministry rejected the comments as “rumor-mongering and smearing” and insisted the project remains under Peruvian authority, according to The Associated Press report.

Asia analyst Gordon Chang told Fox News Digital: “Chancay is so central that analysts say it will redirect trade across the South Pacific. We know Beijing considers ports to be dual-use and strategic. China, held up the BlackRock deal to acquire the CK Hutchinson port operations in the Panama Canal Zone even though the ports are nowhere near China itself.”

“In times of war, China will not allow its port operations to load, unload, or service American ships or ships coming from or going to U.S. ports,” he warned.

Jack Burnham, senior analyst in the China program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said the port reflects a broader strategic push by Beijing in the region.

“The Chancay port is a keystone in China’s investment in Latin America — its size and proximity provide a bridge across the Pacific and access to another market to fuel Beijing’s export-driven economic engine,” Burnham said.

“China’s investment in Peru is predicated on Beijing grasping the sinews of Lima’s critical infrastructure to gain influence. With effective control over the port cemented for now by a lower Peruvian court ruling, China gains access to one of the largest critical infrastructure projects in the region, a position from which it could exercise significant control.”

The dispute comes as Washington and Beijing compete for influence across Latin America, where China has expanded investment through infrastructure projects and trade, analysts say.

China’s state-owned shipping giant Cosco, which holds a majority stake in the project, dismissed U.S. concerns and said the court ruling “in no way involves aspects of sovereignty,” adding that Peruvian authorities still oversee security, environmental compliance and customs, according to The Associated Press.

Peru’s transport infrastructure regulator, Ositran, has said it plans to appeal the ruling, arguing the port should not be exempt from the same oversight applied to other major facilities.

Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told Fox News Digital that China strongly opposes what it called U.S. “false accusations and disinformation” regarding the Chancay port, citing remarks made by a Foreign Ministry spokesperson at a regular briefing on Feb. 12.

He described Chancay as a flagship China-Peru Belt and Road project and South America’s first “smart and green” port, saying the first phase is expected to cut shipping time between Peru and China to 23 days and reduce logistics costs by more than 20%, while generating about $4.5 billion annually for Peru and creating over 8,000 direct jobs. Liu said the project will strengthen Peru’s role as a regional trade gateway linking Asia and Latin America and support broader development, including environmental initiatives tied to wetlands and coastal habitats.

He added that China–Latin America partnerships are driven by shared development goals and benefit people on both sides.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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