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US has choices to deal with Chinese impact in Panama, United States official states

The head of the Federal Maritime Commission will inform a U.S. Senate committee that the United States has choices to resolve the growing presence of China and Chinese firms in Panama. President Donald Trump has sworn that the United States would take back the Panama Canal however has actually given no more details on when or how he planned to reclaim the canal which is the sovereign territory of an ally.

We require to increase assistance for American business seeking to do organization in Panama and throughout the Americas. Chinese companies must not be the sole bidders on agreements, Federal Maritime Commission Chair Louis E. Sola said in written testament to be presented on Tuesday at the Senate Commerce Committee hearing on the Panama Canal. The testimony was seen by Reuters.

Sola added that Chinese business have had the ability to pursue billions of dollars in advancement agreements in Panama, much of which were physical facilities jobs, some on or nearby to the Panama Canal.

Senate Commerce Committee Chair Ted Cruz stated ahead of the hearing: The United States spent for and developed the Panama Canal, but Panama is dealing with America unjustly and ceding control of key facilities to China.

Previously, Trump has declined to dismiss possible use of military force, drawing criticism from Washington's Latin American good friends and enemies alike.

In Sola's testimony, he stated: The United States is not without options in dealing with the growing presence of China and Chinese business in Panama and throughout the Americas. Nor are we without alternatives as they associate with the continued viability of the Canal.

He also said it was essential to safeguard the independence of the Panama Canal Authority.

Panama's president, Jose Raul Mulino, stated last week that Panama has administered the canal responsibly for world trade, including for the United States, and that it is and will continue to be Panamanian.

More than 40% of U.S. container traffic, valued at approximately $ 270 billion each year, transits the Panama Canal.

In August of last year, Sola and the FMC's then-chair, Dan Maffei, visited Panama and met Mulino after drought conditions seriously impacted canal operations.

Maffei stated in composed testament to be presented to the Senate committee on Tuesday that Panama's rainy season in 2015 has actually thankfully reduced intense water-supply problems for the time-being and restored normal transit volumes.

(source: Reuters)