The Phnom Penh Post

Tillerson to visit leaders of Asia

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WI TH North Korea’s drive to field a nuclear-armed missile rapidly emerging as President Donald Trump’s first foreign crisis, his top diplomat is heading to a nervous region.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, a former oil executive with no government experience, has yet to make an impact inWashingt­on, where he has not even appointed a senior staff.

But this week he will head as emissary of the world’s top power to Tokyo, Seoul and Beijing to tackle a nuclear standoff that threatens to tip into a catastroph­ic war.

Tillerson will arrive in Tokyo on Wednesday for talks with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, who watched Pyongyang’s latest missile tests with alarm.

On Friday, he will be in Seoul and a South Korea mired in a domestic political crisis but also still braced for further provocatio­ns from its belligeren­t northern neighbour.

The secretary will meet Hwang Kyo-ahn – who is acting president until an election can be held to replace impeached leader Park Geun-hye – and talk with Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se.

Then, on Saturday, Tillerson will be in China, the United States’ nearest peer as a world power and perhaps the only one that retains any leverage over Kim Jong-un’s regime. China supported previous UN sanctions against North Korea, and has in theory halted coal imports from its smaller neighbour, but it is reluctant to take steps that could see the regime fall.

Since coming to office in January, and especially since the most recent North Korean missile tests last week, Trump has been looking for ways to turn up the pressure on Pyongyang.

“I think it’s well known that we are looking currently at approaches to the North Korea question and there is a range of things that are being considered,” a senior US official said.

Among the other options pushed by the hawkish wing of the Washington foreign policy community are secondary sanctions that would target any Chinese banks that work with Pyongyang.

But officials preparing the trip, briefing reporters anonymousl­y at a time when most senior diplomatic positions in Washington are unfilled, said no major announceme­nts are imminent.

“We’re trying to come up with what the approach of the new administra­tion is going to be,” one said.

No peace treaty was signed after the 1950-53 Korean War, so Seoul and its US ally are technicall­y still in a state of hostilitie­s with its neighbour across a demilitari­sed zone.

Since the peninsula split, South Korea has become an economic power with democratic institutio­ns, but there are still more than 28,000 US personnel deployed to aid in its defence.

North Korea has a small number of bombs and now it is testing an interconti­nental ballistic missile and shorter-range rockets that could threaten US bases and cities in the Pacific rim.

Most observers see China as the only power with the leverage to get its isolated neighbour to stand down, and existing United Nations-backed sanctions have had little effect so far.

The crisis is shaping up to be the key early challenge of Trump’s presidency and the Pentagon has already provoked China’s ire by deploying the THAAD anti-missile system in South Korea.

US officials insist THAAD is a purely defensive system designed to protect South Korea and Japan from Kim’s missiles, but Beijing sees it as a threat to its own deterrent ability.

And the signals coming out of China are not encouragin­g for those in Washington who cling to the hope that Beijing may be ready to rein in its small but combative neighbour.

On Wednesday, Foreign Minister Wang Yi implied that the US and North Korea were equally at fault for provoking the latest crisis and headed towards a “head-on collision”.

Wang urged the US military to halt planned exercises with South Korea, in exchange for Pyongyang halting its nuclear and missile programs – an idea Washington promptly dismissed.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson faces his first diplomatic tests this week as he meets with leaders in East Asia under the looming threat of North Korea’s recent nuclear weapons tests.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson faces his first diplomatic tests this week as he meets with leaders in East Asia under the looming threat of North Korea’s recent nuclear weapons tests.

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