The Phnom Penh Post

Tillerson seeks fresh NK efforts

- Dave Clark

TWO decades of diplomacy aimed at curbing North Korea’s nuclear ambitions have failed and a new approach is needed, the United States’ top envoy said yesterday.

During a visit to Japan at the start of an Asian tour, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said China needed to play its part in reining in its errant neighbour.

In his first major foray into crisis diplomacy, the new US envoy is looking to reassure key Asian allies that Washington stands with them in the face of the accelerati­ng nuclear and missile threats from North Korea.

But he warned that past policies and punishment­s have had virtually no effect on Pyongyang’s ambitions.

“I think it’s important to recognise that the diplomatic and other efforts of the past 20 years to bring North Korea to a point of denucleari­sation have failed,” he told a press conference with Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida.

“In the face of the ever escalating threat it is clear that a new approach is required.”

He also said that the US will continue to work closely with Japan and South Korea in countering the threat, but also extend- ed an olive branch to the country’s people.

“North Korea and its people need not fear the United States or their neighbours in the region who seek only to live in peace with North Korea,” he said, suggesting that criticism was aimed at the regime in Pyongyang.

President Donald Trump had caused consternat­ion during his White House campaign by suggesting US allies Japan and South Korea need to do more to defend themselves, but since taking office has been careful to offer complete support.

Tillerson, the former oilman Trump chose to head his diplomatic team, reiterated that message.

“The US Japan alliance remains the cornerston­e of peace and stability in the AsiaPacifi­c region,” he told Kishida earlier at the start of their meet- ing, before he held talks Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

But he also stressed the importance of three-way cooperatio­n with South Korea, calling it “critical in particular as we address North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missiles programs”.

Kishida, meanwhile, thanked Tillerson for US backing.

“I highly value the fact that you chose Japan as your first place to visit in Asia,” he said, adding that it indicates the “importance” the US attaches to the relationsh­ip.

The tour, which also includes South Korea and China, is Tillerson’s first major foray into crisis diplomacy, after brief trips to Bonn and Mexico City.

After Tokyo, Tillerson will fly to Seoul for talks with South Korea’s acting leader, and at the weekend he heads to Beijing amid reports he will seek to finalise plans for Chinese leader Xi Jinping to visit Trump in April.

US officials have been spooked by North Korea’s accelerati­ng progress towards building an interconti­nental ballistic missile that could threaten US mainland cities.

China is perhaps the last country with significan­t leverage over North Korea, which has ignored several rounds of UN-backed sanctions targeting its banned weapons program.

“We do believe they have a very important role to play,” Tillerson said of Beijing.

“We will be having discussion­s with China as to other actions that they should be undertakin­g,” he added.

Beijing shares US concerns over Pyongyang’s attempts to build an arsenal of nuclear devices, but has been much more measured in its reaction to the ballistic missile program.

 ?? TORU YAMANAKA/AFP ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (left) answers questions beside his Japanese counterpar­t Fumio Kishida during a joint press conference after their talks at the Iikura Guesthouse in Tokyo yesterday.
TORU YAMANAKA/AFP US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (left) answers questions beside his Japanese counterpar­t Fumio Kishida during a joint press conference after their talks at the Iikura Guesthouse in Tokyo yesterday.

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