U.S. leader, diminished at home, is feted in Asia
BEIJING — President Obama made his last trip to Asia, in September 2016, from a position of relative strength. His approval ratings were reliably high, both at home and abroad. He deepened collaboration with China on climate change, doubled American aid to Laos, and lifted an arms embargo on Vietnam.
But in terms of decorum, the trip was a disaster. When Obama arrived in China, no staircase awaited Air Force One, causing a flurry of embarrassed confusion. He canceled a meeting with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte after the strongman disparaged him profanely.
As President Trump begins a 12-day, five-country trip to Asia, his situation is essentially flipped. Trump arrived in Japan on Sunday as a diminished figure at home — legislative setbacks are piling up, his approval ratings are historically low, and his campaign is under investigation on suspicion of colluding with Russia. According to the Pew Research Center, the U.S. presidency’s
favorability ratings abroad are at the lowest point since the George W. Bush era.
Yet Japan has feted Trump with ceremonial extravagance, and China and South Korea are expected to do the same, marking a fundamental shift in how foreign leaders are navigating their relationships with the U.S. presidency.
“There’s an under-thesurface story here,” said Jonathan Pollack, an Asia specialist at the Brookings Institution, “as all of these leaders reposition themselves and their countries for an era in which American power and the American presidency seem diminished in significant ways.”
Pollack said that a deep question lies beneath the polite ceremonies of Trump’s visit.
“Are we seeing leaders that increasingly are trying to operate more, if not on their own, then at least mindful, first and foremost, of their own country’s interests?” he said. “So if we have America first, we may also have Japan first, China first, Korea first, etc., etc., etc.”
Trump’s trip is the longest of any president since George H.W. Bush visited Asia in the early ’90s. Trump arrived in Japan on Sunday for a meeting with its prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and landed in South Korea midday Tuesday. He will continue on to China, Vietnam and the Philippines. He’s expected to focus mainly on confronting North Korea’s nuclear threat, and also address U.S. trade imbalances in the region.
Trump has the lowest approval rating at this point in his presidency in the history of modern polling, according to a recent Washington Post-ABC News survey, which put it at 37%. His party is deeply divided — several prominent Republicans have openly rebuked him in recent months — and the Republican-controlled Congress has failed to introduce a new healthcare bill. Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 campaign, issued his first indictments last week. (Trump has denied all allegations of wrongdoing.)
Meanwhile, Abe won a late-October snap election, giving his party a commanding majority in parliament. And Chinese President Xi Jinping, at a major Communist Party conclave last month, rose to become the country’s most powerful leader since Mao Tse-tung.
Yet in the eyes of many Asian leaders, Trump differs from his predecessors in key ways. His “America first” rhetoric — and unfiltered online behavior — has injected an element of unpredictability into once-stolid alliances. He’s enthusiastically dispensed with longheld presidential mores, such as championing human rights and democracy abroad. And his preferred mode of diplomacy is much more personal.
On Sunday, when Abe received Trump at the Kasumigaseki Country Club outside Tokyo, he assiduously appealed to the U.S. president’s personal tastes. Together, they signed white, gold-emblazoned hats that said “Donald & Shinzo Make Alliance Even Greater.” They played nine holes of golf, accompanied by Japan’s top professional golfer, Hideki Matsuyama. They dined on hamburgers made with U.S. beef.
“The relationship is really extraordinary. We like each other, and our countries like each other,” Trump said. “And I don’t think we’ve ever been closer to Japan than we are right now.” Abe tweeted that Trump was a “marvelous friend.”
South Korea is planning a similarly elaborate itinerary, featuring a banquet with K-pop performances. Trump and President Moon Jae-in will discuss North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.
On Wednesday, Trump will arrive in China to meet Xi — who will also probably roll out the red carpet, as the country seeks validation as a superpower on the same level as the U.S. (Trump praised Xi on his “extraordinary elevation” at the conclave last month, and described him as “the king of China.”)
Chinese ambassador to the U.S., Cui Tiankai, said on Oct. 30 that Beijing would give Trump a “state visitplus,” including a banquet and military honor guard. Authorities will close the Forbidden City on Wednesday for his visit.
“Do the Chinese, when it comes to Trump, think they’ve got his number — that they’ve got him wrapped around their finger, and can manipulate him?” asked Paul Haenle, director of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center in Beijing. “Or is this a function of them worrying about him being unpredictable and impulsive, and tough to deal with? My answer is ‘yes’ — it’s all of the above.”
Trump was defensive while speaking aboard Air Force One on his way to Japan, when reporters asked him about Xi’s successful run of consolidating power, compared with his own stature.
“Excuse me, so am I,” he said. “Highest stock market in history, lowest unemployment in 17 years, a military that’s rapidly rebuilding, ISIS is virtually defeated in the Middle East….”
“Now, with that being said, he represents China, I represent the United States,” he continued. “But we’re going in with tremendous strength.”