The Mercury News

Obama aims to build his legacy with Asia trip

President to focus on human rights in Myanmar visit

- By Julie Pace

BANGKOK— For President Barack Obama, expanding U. S. influence in Asia is more than just countering China or opening up new markets to American businesses. It’s also about building his legacy.

Fresh off re- election, Obama will make a significan­t investment in that effort during a quick run through Southeast Asia that begins Sunday. In addition to stops in Thailand and Cambodia, the president will make a historic visit to Myanmar, where his administra­tion has led efforts to ease the once pariah nation out of internatio­nal isolation.

The trip marks Obama’s fourth visit to Asia in as many years. He kicks off his schedule in Bangkok. With a second term now guaranteed, aides say Obama will be a regular visitor to the region over the next four years as well.

“Continuing to fill in our pivot to Asia will be a critical part of the president’s second term and ultimately his foreign policy legacy,” said Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser.

The president’s motivation­s in Asia are both personal and strategic.

Obama, who was born in Hawaii and lived in Indonesia as a child, has called himself America’s first “Pacific president.” The region gives him an opportunit­y to open up new markets for U. S. companies, promote democracy and ease fears of China’s rise by boosting U. S. military presence in the area.

The president, like many of his predecesso­rs, had hoped to cement his foreign policy legacy in the Middle East. He visited two major allies in the region, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, on one of his first overseas trips as president and attempted to revive peace talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

But those talks stalled, and fresh outbursts of violence between Israel and the Palestinia­ns make the prospects of a peace accord appear increasing­ly slim. The Obama- backed Arab Spring democracy push has had mixed results so far, with Islamists taking power in Egypt and progress in Libya tainted by the deadly attacks on the U. S. Consulate in Benghazi. Obama hasn’t been back to the region since 2009.

In Asia, however, Obama will be viewed as something of an elder statesman when he returns less than two weeks after winning re- election. The region is undergoing significan­t leadership changes, most notably in China, where the Communist Party tapped new leaders last week. Japan and South Korea will both hold new elections soon.

“Most of the leaders he’ll meet with will not have a tenure as long as he will as president,” said Michael Green, an Asia scholar at the Washington- based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “So he’ll go into this in a very strong position.”

The centerpiec­e of Obama’s whirlwind Asia tour is his visit to Myanmar. It will be the first time a U. S. president has visited the former pariah state.

Myanmar has become something of a pet project for Obama and his national security aides, who have cheered the country’s significan­t-strides toward democracy. Obama lifted some U. S. penalties on Myanmar, appointed a permanent U. S. ambassador and hosted democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi at the White House this year.

Many of the same strategic motivation­s behind Obama’s larger focus on Asia are at play in Myanmar, which is known by the U. S. as Burma.

The country long has oriented itself toward China, but the easing of sanctions gives U. S. businesses a chance to gain a foothold there. It’s also an opportunit­y for the Obama administra­tion to show other nations in the region, and elsewhere in the world, that there are benefits to aligning with the U. S.

Still, there’s little denying that history has been a draw for Obama’s team when it comes to its dealings with Myanmar. That’s led to criticism from some human rights groups that say Obama’s visit is premature given that the country continues to hold political prisoners and has been unable to stem some ethnic violence.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman takes a photo Saturday in Yangon, Myanmar, of a wall painting created by Myanmar graffiti artists to welcome President Barack Obama. Obama will visit the Asian nation on Monday, a first for a sitting U. S. president.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman takes a photo Saturday in Yangon, Myanmar, of a wall painting created by Myanmar graffiti artists to welcome President Barack Obama. Obama will visit the Asian nation on Monday, a first for a sitting U. S. president.

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