"China is a growing power of great economic, political, and increasingly military influence and presence," Brennan told a Washington audience yesterday in response to a question on China at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), a top American think-tank.
"And clearly, as we look at what's happening in the South China Sea, there is a reason for the United States to pay attention to what China is doing on a number of fronts, which we are," the CIA Director said.
He said he was out in Singapore a couple of weeks ago, along with the Defence Secretary Ash Carter, at the Shangri-La conference.
"I met with the heads of the services, intelligence services, from the ASEAN countries, as well as with my Chinese counterpart, as a way to maintain the dialogue and to let them know that the US treats this region of the world very seriously, and we have very important national-security interests that we're not going step away from.
It is an effort to try to make sure that US national-security interests are protected and advanced, as are the national security interests of our allies and partners in the region, and we fulfil our obligations, particularly in the area of freedom of navigation in those seas," the CIA chief said.
In response to another question, Brennan said the Chinese President Xi Jinping, has a strategic vision of what he wants to be able to accomplish in the region.
"And given that there is a new administration in Taiwan, given that there is a rather important dynamic that is going on in the region with how China is flexing some of its muscles, I think this also is in a period of transition. And I think there is this dynamism," he added.
"I think, and it's not a secret to anybody, that mainland China views Taiwan in a very special way. And I think it has, you know, aspirations to further solidify the relationship between mainland China and Taiwan," Brennan said.
