Gulf News

Trump trip will articulate Asia agenda beyond Pyongyang

The US president faces a tricky task in balancing his focus on North Korea with interest in the wider regional dialogue

- Special to Gulf News

S President Donald Trump is making final preparatio­ns for his landmark 12-day trip to Asia with stop-offs in Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippine­s. While North Korea will dominate the first part of the visit which starts on November 6, Trump is also being billed to outline his wider Asia policy for the first time with an alternativ­e vision to Barack Obama’s regional ‘pivot’.

Previously, the Obama administra­tion pushed the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) trade deal to underline its regional commitment, partly to push back on China’s growing power and presence which is a concern for some Asia allies. But the Trump team pulled out of that accord with no replacemen­t initiative­s so far. A key goal of the trip for Trump is therefore to dispel perception­s that he has little interest in this strategica­lly important area of the globe. To do so, he will seek to articulate what his political, security, and economic ambitions for the region are in a speech anticipate­d in Vietnam at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) summit.

Beyond allies like South Korea and Japan, the danger is that the president and his team may appear on the tour so overwhelmi­ngly focused on North Korea — crucial as that issue is to resolve — that he shows little affinity for the broader range of issues in the regional dialogue from South China Sea tensions, to regional counter-terrorism, and trade. And this could fuel concerns in some countries that agendas are not aligned, and that the administra­tion cares little for them. Trump therefore faces a diplomatic balancing act, especially in the first part of his trip where the over-riding goal is getting Japan, South Korea — and especially China — on board the US approach toward tightening the screws on North Korea.

While Japanese President Shinzo Abe is closely aligned to Trump having just received a renewed electoral mandate on the back of tough talk against Pyongyang, Seoul and Beijing are tougher audiences. South Korean President Moon Jae-in strongly opposes use of military force on the peninsula, while Trump has declared “more dialogue a dead end” and that Moon’s approach is tantamount to “appeasemen­t”.

Policy review

The challenge is greater, however, in China and it is reported that the White House is now conducting a root and branch review of policy toward Beijing. To be sure, US-China disagreeme­nts over North Korea have softened with Beijing — which accounts for some 90 per cent of its neighbour’s foreign trade — tightening sanctions. Yet, China still has key difference­s with the US. A key reason for this is President Xi Jinping does not want to push the regime so hard that it becomes significan­tly destabilis­ed. From his vantage point, this risks North Korea behaving even more unpredicta­bly, and/or the outside possibilit­y of the regime’s collapse. Beijing fears if the Communist regime in the hermit kingdom falls it could undermine the legitimacy of the Chinese Communist Party too. In addition, it worries that the collapse of order in Pyongyang could lead to instabilit­y on the North Korea-China border, a potentiall­y large influx of refugees that it would need to manage, and ultimately the potential emergence of a pro-US successor state.

Yet, in the face of repeated provocatio­ns from Pyongyang, Washington senses there may be a window to bring itself and Beijing even closer together. Trump will therefore probe if China may jettison more of its longstandi­ng reservatio­ns about squeezing its neighbour.

He will make clear in Beijing the stakes in play are growing fast. North Korea’s recent nuclear test and some 15 missile launches this year have offered significan­t evidence that it is moving closer to developing a nuclear warhead capable of being fitted on to an interconti­nental ballistic missile that can strike the US mainland, let alone key allies like Japan or South Korea in much closer proximity.

Taken overall, Trump faces a tricky task in balancing his desire to focus on North Korea while showing interest in the wider regional dialogue. Perhaps his key test will come in Beijing where he will seek to align more closely positions over Pyongyang given the possibilit­y that he could soon face his first major foreign policy crisis.

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

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