<![CDATA[Pentagon's top official on Asia policy, Randall Schriver, quits his post]>
Randall Schriver, the Pentagon's leading Asia policy expert and one of the administration's most vocal critics of Beijing, has resigned, the Department of Defence announced on Thursday.
Schriver will leave his post as assistant secretary of defence for Indo-Pacific security affairs at the end of the month, citing the toll of his work on his family, department spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said.
"His area of expertise in the Indo-Pacific region is unmatched in the department," Hoffman said at a department press briefing. "And also, given the demands of the job, it requires a significant amount of international travel."
News of his departure was first reported by Radio Free Asia.
Schriver's nearly two-year tenure has been marked by his persistent critique of Beijing's policies and behaviour in the military and security spheres and his view of strategic competition between the US and China as "the defining challenge of our generation".
In May, Schriver became the first US official to publicly use the term "concentration camps" to describe mass internment facilities in China's far west, where the United Nations estimates that up to 1 million Uygurs and members of other ethnic minority groups have been detained and subject to forced indoctrination.
Such remarks put the US official at loggerheads with Beijing's foreign ministry, which accused him of "grossly interfering" in China's internal affairs and called on him to "respect the truth and put aside [his] prejudices".
Schriver's policy initiatives also caused friction closer to home, according to a report in Foreign Policy that cited unidentified sources.
His efforts to strengthen relations with Taiwan, the self-governing island considered by Beijing to be a renegade province, ran counter to US President Donald Trump's attempts to conclude a trade agreement with China, causing Schriver to be "frustrated", Foreign Policy said.
Trump claimed in a tweet on Thursday that a trade deal with China was "very close".
Regardless, Schriver's policies will not be easily overturned, said James Carafano, vice-president of foreign and defence policy at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based think tank.
Schriver "had a huge impact in terms of freedom of navigation [in the South China Sea], shifting resources to the Indo-Pacific theatre, elevating US-Japan-Australia and Indian relations and US-India bilateral relations", Carafano said. "He had big impact in focusing US policy on countering China military inputs in the Indo-Pacific."
"The policies that Schriver set will drive on because he got the train going down the tracks and it's just going to keep going," he added.
Before his appointment by US President Donald Trump in early 2018, Schriver had worked in a number of government, military and civilian positions relating to East Asian affairs.
Those roles included deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, CEO and president of the Project 2049 Institute, a think tank focused on security in Asia, and attache for the Navy at the US embassy in Beijing.
In a previous stint at the Pentagon in the mid-1990s, Schriver handled the US military's bilateral relations with China's People's Liberation Army and oversaw the military relationship with Taiwan.
During his most recent posting, Schriver has been considered a fervent ally of the self-governed island in the face of what he has called rising pressure from Beijing in the form of military build-up and activities in the region.
In June, during a discussion at the Washington-based Heritage Foundation, he said the US would treat Taiwan "as a normal security assistance partner" when it came to arms sales.
This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).
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