Trump ambassador warns China’s power move at sea is threat ‘we cannot afford to ignore’

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China is using control over global seas as a tool of “political coercion,” the US ambassador to the United Kingdom warned, as President Donald Trump is restating his interest in Greenland for that very same reason.

China is seeking to turn ports, ships and supply chains into instruments of geopolitical leverage, US Ambassador to the UK Warren Stephens warned in a statement to the International Maritime Organization Council (IMO).

“I spoke about a challenge that we cannot afford to ignore: China’s systematic effort to use maritime power as an instrument of political coercion,” Stephens wrote in a Truth Social post after the speech. “Beijing has pursued an aggressive strategy of acquiring port concessions and infrastructure around the world — not simply for commercial gain, but to extend its strategic reach and weaponize that access against sovereign nations.”

The US is “not a passive observer of maritime affairs,” Stephens told the IMO, calling America a “cornerstone of the global maritime economy.” He said the US Maritime Transportation System supports $5.4 trillion in economic activity each year and nearly 30 million jobs.

US Ambassador to the UK Warren Stephens lays a wreath at the statue of US President Dwight D Eisenhower in Grosvenor Square, London, at the statue’s rededication service on Friday, February 13, 2026. PA Images via Getty Images

The warning comes as Trump continued peacemaking efforts in the Strait of Hormuz and pressed Denmark and NATO for US control over Greenland due to Chinese and Russian threats to free navigation in the Arctic.

“Denmark doesn’t spend money to really help Greenland, but it’s an important part for the United States, and it’s surrounded by China ships and Russian ships,” Trump said at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey.

President Donald Trump points as he arrives at Glasgow Prestwick Airport with Warren Stephens, US Ambassador to the UK in Prestwick, Scotland, on July 25, 2025. Getty Images

For global security, Greenland “should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark,” Trump added.

“They wouldn’t go along with it,” Trump said of Denmark. “And with all the money we spend to help them with Russia. And we don’t have to spend any money, we could remove all of our soldiers out of Europe because, as you probably noticed, Europe is a very different place than it was 20 years ago. A lot different.”

Greenland’s position between the Arctic and North Atlantic has made it a key piece of US security planning.

Russian missile cruiser Varyag, which will participate in China and Russia’s ‘Joint Sea-2026’ naval exercise, docks at a military port in Qingdao, east China’s Shandong Province, on July 5, 2026. ZUMAPRESS.com

“President Trump has made restoring American maritime leadership a national priority,” Stephens said in his IMO remarks warning on China’s broader maritime footprint.

“The evidence is clear and growing,” Stephens said. “China currently builds more than half of the world’s ships. It dominates the production of ship-to-shore cranes and shipping containers.”

A nuclear-powered Type 094A Jin-class ballistic missile submarine of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy in the South China Sea during a military display on April 12, 2018. via REUTERS

Stephens cited Panama as a recent example, pointing to a ruling by Panama’s Supreme Court that found CK Hutchison’s port concessions at the Balboa and Cristóbal terminals unconstitutional. The terminals sit at opposite ends of the Panama Canal, one of the world’s most strategically important trade corridors.

Stephens said China’s response to the Panama ruling was “swift and punishing,” accusing Beijing of taking action against Panama-flagged vessels in a move the US characterized as an attempt to undermine Panama’s sovereignty and disrupt global supply chains.

“What happened to Panama is a warning to every nation in this room,” Stephens said.

The guided-missile frigate Hengyang sails from the pier of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Hong Kong Garrison’s naval base on Stonecutters Island in Hong Kong, south China, on July 6, 2026. Xinhua/Shutterstock

“When a country allows a foreign power or its proxies to control its ports, it does not simply accept a commercial arrangement,” he added. “It accepts a vulnerability.”

Stephens urged IMO member states to closely scrutinize deals allowing foreign entities, especially state-linked enterprises, to operate critical port infrastructure.

“Transparency, the rule of law, and genuine sovereignty are not obstacles to commerce,” Stephens said. “They are its foundation.”

The ambassador also said the US would press for maritime security, sanctions enforcement, protection of flag state rights, freedom of navigation and updated standards on polar operations, autonomous vessels and cyber risk management.

PLA Navy personnel wave goodbye to the guided-missile frigate Hengyang as it departs from Hong Kong. Xinhua/Shutterstock

“The pattern is consistent: China uses its maritime and economic power to coerce, to intimidate, and to punish those who assert their sovereign rights,” Stephens said.

The Chinese government has routinely rejected US accusations that its overseas infrastructure investments are coercive, portraying its port, shipping and Belt and Road projects as commercial partnerships that support global trade and development.

Stephens said the US will continue contributing expertise, resources and leadership at the IMO, but warned that the rules-based maritime order cannot be taken for granted.

“A free and open ocean is not guaranteed,” he said. “It must be defended.”

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