Baltimore Sun

U.S. message to Asia: Keep heat on Kim

- By Tracy Wilkinson

SINGAPORE — With a modest investment package and contradict­ory messages, the Trump administra­tion is attempting to counter China’s powerful influence in Southeast Asia while also urging the region’s countries to keep up pressure on nuclear-armed North Korea.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived Friday in Singapore as part of a threenatio­n trip that will include meetings with officials of roughly two dozen government­s. The meetings are part of a foreign ministers’ summit of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, which also includes “partners,” including the United States, China, Australia and Iran.

Pompeo’s trip is part of Washington’s attempt to reshape and expand its footprint in Asia. The Trump administra­tion has tried to relabel the Asia-Pacific region as the Indo-Pacific in an effort to incorporat­e India into the region’s diplomacya­s a counterbal­ance to China.

Also on the sidelines of the minister-level summit, Pompeo met his Turkish counterpar­t Friday to press again for the release of an American Protestant minister detained there for nearly two years. The State Department characteri­zed Pompeo’s talks with Mevlut Cavusoglu as “constructi­ve.”

Earlier this week, the Trump administra­tion hit Turkey with economic sanctions to demand the release of the preacher, Andrew Brunson, and other U.S. citizens swept up in a massive crackdown on dissidents.

Speaking to reporters traveling with him to Singapore, Pompeo said the Turkish government was “on notice” that the “clock had run” and that it was time for Brunson to go home.

“I hope they’ll see this for what it is, a demonstrat­ion that we’re very serious,” Pompeo said. “Brunson needs to come home. As do all the Americans being held by the Turkish government. Pretty straightfo­rward. They’ve been holding these folks for a long time. These are innocent people.”

The main theme here, however, is the giant potential of the region’s economic power. Ahead of his trip, Pompeo said the United States had a stake in the peace and prosperity of a “free and open Indo-Pacific.”

But Pompeo’s efforts have been overshadow­ed by President Donald Trump’s escalating trade war with China. Far from an open market, several countries in the region say, it seems the United States has become more protection­ist.

In his Singapore meetings, Pompeo will also urge Asian countries to keep uppressure on North Korea by continuing to enforce tough economic sanctions. The sanctions were imposed on Pyongyang by the United Nations and are aimed at discouragi­ng its nuclear activities.

Pompeo maintains that the sanction regime is largely intact, but several of the region’s government­s have Officials greet Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday at a military airport in Subang, outside of Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital. Pompeo arrived Friday in Singapore. begun to relax the measures, which targeted North Korea’s imports and exports as a meanstostr­angle the government of Kim Jong Un economical­ly and cause diplomatic and political isolation.

China, Pyongyang’s chief ally, has been accused by U.S. officials of reneging on sanctions and allowing some trade to resume.

The efforts to pressure North Korea come as the United States continues to try to negotiate with North Ko- rean leader KimJongUno­na program to “denucleari­ze” the Korean Peninsula. Many officials in Washington remain skeptical about Kim’s intentions, despite Trump’s apparent willingnes­s to believe the dictator.

“We, too, remain concerned about the scale of North Korea’s illicit procuremen­t, in particular of refined petroleum products via U.N.prohibited ship- to- ship transfers,” a senior State Department official said. Ship- to-ship transfers often involve Chinese vessels.

The said a goal of the meetings was to remind countries of the success a global coalition confrontin­g North Korea has had in encouragin­g Pyongyang to come to the negotiatin­g table.

“On North Korea, these are more than ‘asks.’ It’s a reminder of their obligation­s,” the official told reporters aboard Pompeo’s flight to his first stop, Malaysia. “We do have concerns that North Korea is not meeting its obligation­s.”

For all Pompeo’s intentions, the administra­tion’s message conflicts with many of the region’s needs or concerns.

The one meeting that Pompeo will chair involves countries from the Lower MekongRive­r region, including Laos and Vietnam, which have experience­d deadly flooding and other environmen­tal disasters.

Administra­tion officials emphasized their interest in promoting work with the countries to collect whatthey called water data. But many of these countries blame the disasters onclimate change, a problem that many in the Trump administra­tion dismiss.

 ?? VINCENT THIAN/AP ??
VINCENT THIAN/AP

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