Imperial Valley Press

Obama legacy: Outreach to Asia still a work in progress

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VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) — President Barack Obama’s final trip across the Pacific this week wasn’t just a valedictor­y tour through Asia. It was a tour through the good, the bad and the ugly of his Asia policy.

As Obama hopped from summit to summit in China and Laos, the geopolitic­al forces and characters that have confounded his attempt to reshape American influence in the region arose for parting shots. China flexed its muscle, North Korea reared its head, Washington politics piped up from afar, even the Middle East — a perpetual distractio­n for Obama — briefly stole the spotlight.

Obama’s successes also had their turn. The president celebrated progress in his long fight against climate change. He reset relations with an erstwhile war enemy. He used the power of his personal story to connect with Asia’s rising generation.

And so, as he moved from tarmac to pagoda, from crowded summit dinners to a quiet Buddhist temple, Obama confronted his legacy: He will leave unfinished his effort to shift U.S. diplomatic and military attention and military spending from the Middle East to a rising Asia. But he has set a course for his successor — should he or she chose to follow it.

“Many American presidents in the past have said, ‘Oh, Asia is the future.’ With the pivot, Obama said, ‘Asia is not just the future, it is now,’” said Victor Cha, President George W. Bush’s former Asia adviser. “It set a bar that other presidents will either try to meet, or not. And that would be noticed.”

Democrat Hillary Clinton is largely viewed as backing Obama’s approach. Republican Donald Trump has sharply criticized Obama as being weak in his negotiatio­ns with the Chinese.

Obama on Thursday shot back: “I don’t think the guy is qualified to be president of the United States. And every time he speaks, that opinion is confirmed.”

Soon after his election, Obama put a premium on ensuring Asian capitals knew they would be more than an afterthoug­ht to him. Evan Medeiros, Obama’s top Asia adviser until last year, said the president began in 2009 with a round of meetings and calls to Asian leaders to say he knew many were frustrated with Washington, but that he wanted a “fresh start.”

Obama committed to attend the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations annual meeting, a regional summit that China, too, attends, as well as the East Asia Summit. His repeated visits led him to 14 Asia-Pacific countries during his tenure — besting the tallies of Bush and President Bill Clinton, who each visited nine.

He was first sitting president to visit Myanmar, Cambodia and, on Tuesday, tiny landlocked Laos.

“Anytime we asked Obama to do something on Asia, he did it,” Medeiros said.

The president used his frequent trips for maximum symbolic value and capitalize­d on his connection­s. Particular­ly in Southeast Asia, Obama would recall his childhood years in Indonesia. He took regular detours to landmarks and temples. He slipped off his shoes and toured a centuries-old temple in the northern city of Luang Prabang, Laos.

The lush scenery, “it’s very familiar to me,” he told a group of young people.

For Obama, these trips became moments to connect with Asia’s exceedingl­y young population and to cast aside old antagonism­s.

He was the first president to visit Hiroshima. He lifted the arms embargo on Vietnam. He declared the U.S. had a “moral obligation” to help Laos recover from the nineyear shadow war the U.S. conducted in the 1960s and 1970s. Obama announced an infusion of new U.S. aid for cleanup of unexploded ordnance.

As Obama expanded the map, he negotiated a massive Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a multi-nation free trade pact at the heart of his plan to counter China’s economic dominance. Years of negotiatio­n landed a deal, but not in time to save it from an election-year flogging. Deviating sharply from Obama, Clinton now says she opposes the deal, as does Trump. The deal is stalled for the foreseeabl­e future in a Republican-led Congress unwilling to give an outgoing president a major win.

Obama’s efforts are at the core of a game of catch up. China dominates economical­ly and culturally across the region.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BULLIT MARQUEZ ?? U.S. President Barack Obama glances at the leaders as he attends the East Asia Summit on the last day of the 28th and 29th Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summits at the National Convention Center on Thursday in Vientiane, Laos.
AP PHOTO/BULLIT MARQUEZ U.S. President Barack Obama glances at the leaders as he attends the East Asia Summit on the last day of the 28th and 29th Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summits at the National Convention Center on Thursday in Vientiane, Laos.

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