Philippine Daily Inquirer

Trump will be ‘ruinous’ for Asia

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WASHINGTON—US Asia experts who served in past Republican administra­tions on Monday said they would back Hillary Clinton in the presidenti­al race as a Donald Trump presidency would lead to “ruinous marginaliz­ation” for the United States in the region.

In an open letter, the eight former senior officials said that with global strategic competitio­n growing, including from China, it was “absolutely the wrong time to elect an unstable, ill-prepared amateur with no vision or foresight to meet the manifold challenges of the 21st century.”

They said the Republican nominee offered “only bluster or prepostero­us panaceas” for Asia that would “wreck our country’s credibilit­y, economy, and leadership in very short order.”

Signatorie­s

The signatorie­s to the letter included Michael Green, who served as President George W. Bush’s top Asia adviser at the White House, James Clad, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense, and Patrick Cronin, a former senior official at the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

Should Trump get the chance to put his “nostrums” into practice, Asian countries would be forced to shift toward countries challengin­g the United States, most notably China, and some might seek security through nuclear weapons, according to the former officials.

“In short, if the Trump brand… becomes America’s brand, we can expect ruinous marginaliz­ation in Asia and unwanted compliance with rules which the Chinese and other challenger­s set,” they said.

Latest repudiatio­n

Their letter was the latest repudiatio­n of Trump’s candidacy by Republican national security specialist­s.

Last week, 50 former Republican national security officials, including a former CIA director, called Trump unqualifie­d to lead and said he would be “the most reckless president in American history.”

Trump responded to that statement by deriding the signatorie­s as members of “the failed Washington elite” who “deserve the blame for making the world such a dangerous place.”

US allies anxious

Trump has caused alarm in Asia and beyond by saying he would consider letting Japan and South Korea build their own nuclear weapons, rather than have them relying on the United States for protection against North Korea and China.

While making US allies anxious, Trump has also irritated Beijing with his comments, such as by comparing the US trade deficit with China to rape.

One Chinese state newspaper equated Trump to Hitler.

At the same time, Beijing also sees Trump as a businessma­n with whom it could probably negotiate and may also hope he would be less tough on human rights than Clinton.

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