The Mercury News Weekend

Mattis delivers pep talk, reminder to US troops

- By Robert Burns The Associated Press

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, CUBA » Defense Secretary Jim Mattis chose an unusual site Thursday to begin a pre-holiday tour of military bases, urging troops on this Navy base to set a good example for politicall­y divided Americans and be always ready for war. He gave no hint about the future of Guantanamo Bay as a prison for terror suspects, and did not visit the detention center, which President Barack Obama tried unsuccessf­ully to close.

Mattis, the first defense secretary to visit the base since Donald H. Rumsfeld in January 2002, shortly after the first prisoners arrived from Afghanista­n, said the main goal of his trip was to offer holiday cheer and let the troops know their work is appreciate­d. Hemade a point of defending the way prisoners have been treated at Guantanamo Bay, which has been called an infamous torture center. “I amconfiden­t that we’re doing the right thing here,” he said.

He recalled a conversati­on early this year with a woman, whom he did not name, who told him Guantanamo Bay was “a blot on our nation,” but when invited to accompany him to the detention center for an unannounce­d visit, she de- clined. “That shut her up. She didn’t have anything more to say to me,” he said.

Mattis wanted to buck up the troops at Guantanamo and at Naval Station Mayport, near Jacksonvil­le, Florida, where he visited later. He was accompanie­d by an Associated Press reporter and planned on Friday to visit Marines at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and soldiers at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

The troops he saw on Thursday seemed most curious about what some are calling the road to war with North Korea, whose nuclear weapons the Trump administra­tion says pose a grave and intolerabl­e threat.

In a series of talks with troops during the day, North Korea came up time and again, mostly from the troops. Each time, Mattis said the focus is on finding a diplomatic solution with the help of China, Russia and others.

But he also made no bones about what might happen if the diplomats fail.

Mattis said he gets asked about the North Korea problem everywhere he travels. He said he plans on attending ameeting in Vancouver, Canada, nextmonth of foreign ministers of the countries that jointly fought the 1950- 53 Korean War. He said he will brief them on the situation in Korea. “When I leave, we leave this in the diplomats’ hands.”

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