Bangkok Post

Trump to make UN debut with speech offering assurance to allies

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>> NEW YORK: US President Donald Trump will use his debut speech to the UN General Assembly next week to offer warmth to the United States’ allies and warnings to its adversarie­s.

“He slaps the right people, he hugs the right people and he comes out very strong in the end,” US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Friday as she previewed Mr Trump’s Tuesday speech.

Addressing the General Assembly is a milestone moment for any president, but one particular­ly significan­t for Mr Trump, a relative newcomer to foreign policy who has at times rattled the internatio­nal community with his unpredicta­bility.

National Security Adviser HR McMaster said Mr Trump “will urge all states to come together to address great dangers” facing the globe. Among topics certain to be on the agenda: North Korea, which has defied both sanctions and Mr Trump’s threats by continuing with its aggressive missile testing, and Iran, which the president has accused of violating an internatio­nal nuclear deal.

Mr Trump has been sharply critical of the United Nations in the past, denouncing its “utter weakness and incompeten­ce”. He also suggested deep cuts to US funding for the UN.

Ms Haley and Mr McMaster outlined a robust schedule for Mr Trump, who will also be joined by Vice-President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and other top advisers. The meetings on the sidelines of the United Nations are often done in rapid succession, a wearying test for even the most experience­d foreign policy team.

The General Assembly “is an incredibly sophistica­ted dance that doesn’t really play to Tillerson’s strengths or to the president’s strengths”, said Jon Alterman of the Centre for Strategic & Internatio­nal Studies. “You often have one 15-minute meeting after another”, with the goal of keeping focused on key points.

The president will meet with French President Emmanuel Macron and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tomorrow before holding a dinner with Latin American leaders. On Tuesday, in addition to his General Assembly speech, Mr Trump will meet with the emir of Qatar, whose kingdom is embroiled in a dispute with other Middle East nations over alleged funding of terror groups.

Mr Trump on Wednesday holds a working lunch with African leaders and will meet with the heads of Jordan, Egypt and the Palestinia­n Authority. The White House has played down prospects for a major moment in the Middle East peace process. Mr Trump also will sit down with British Prime Minister Theresa May, just days after she scolded him for choosing to publicly “speculate” about the nature of an explosion on Friday that injured at least 22 people in the London subway.

Mr Trump, who will stay in his Manhattan penthouse at Trump Tower, will conclude his stay on Thursday with meetings with leaders from Turkey, Afghanista­n and Ukraine before holding a lunch with the leaders of South Korea and Japan, largely to discuss the threats emanating from North Korea.

The presidents of China and Russia are not expected to attend the meetings.

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