Kuwait Times

New Pentagon chief seeks to reassure nervous Asian allies

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By visiting Japan and South Korea on his first official overseas trip, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is seeking to reinforce key alliances after US President Donald Trump’s campaign-trail complaints that defense treaties disadvanta­ged the United States. The visits also reflect the urgency of concerns on both sides of the Pacific about North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

Mattis, a retired four-star Marine general, inherited a North Korea problem that has grown more worrisome as the communist nation’s leader, Kim Jong Un, claims progress toward fielding a ballistic missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead to the United States. Former Secretary of State John Kerry said in early January the US may need “more forceful ways” of dealing with North Korea if it develops a ballistic missile of interconti­nental range.

Mattis, who entered office hours after Trump on Jan 20, took off from Joint Base Andrews, Maryland before daybreak and is due to arrive today in Seoul, where he will meet with his counterpar­t, Defense Minister Han Min Koo, amid a swirl of political turmoil. President Park Geun-hye was impeached in December and the constituti­onal court is reviewing whether to formally end her rule. Later in the week, Mattis is to hold talks in Tokyo with Defense Minister Tomomi Inada and other senior Japanese government officials.

North Korea is expected to be at or near the top of Mattis’ agenda. Beyond its long-range missile aspiration­s, the North already has missiles capable of hitting South Korea as well as US bases in Japan. Trump said during the campaign that while he supports the alliances with Japan and South Korea, he would not rule out abandoning them if they refuse to pay more for their own defense. “It could be that Japan will have to defend itself against North Korea,” he told a campaign rally in August. The first foreign leader he met as president-elect was Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe; they’ll meet again in Washington on Feb 10.

Mattis has said little in public since taking office. But he has left no doubt that America’s security alliances, including those in Asia, are a top priority. He is the first recently retired military officer to serve as defense secretary since George C Marshall in 1950-51 during the Korean War. Pentagon chiefs regularly visit South Korea and Japan, reflecting their status as US treaty allies. Chuck Hagel, who visited the heavily guarded Demilitari­zed Zone between North and South Korea as defense secretary in September 2013, said in an interview that Mattis is making the right move.

“It was a smart decision” to visit these allies early, Hagel said. He believes officials in Tokyo and Seoul are wondering: “Can we rely on the US? What is the future here?” The US has about 28,000 troops stationed in South Korea and about 50,000 in Japan. Hagel said Tokyo and other US allies in Asia have been particular­ly upset by Trump’s decision to pull the US out of a Pacific Rim trade initiative, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, the centerpiec­e of former President Barack Obama’s effort to strengthen US economic ties in the region. —AFP

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