The Mercury News

President Obama set for final Asia tour of his presidency.

Climate change, ISIS, human rights on the agenda for 8-day trip

- 001 By Kathleen Hennessey Associated Press Obama

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama faces thorny talks about climate change, human rights and the fight against the Islamic State group when he sets off this week across the Pacific for an eight-day valedictor­y tour through Asia.

Obama is to leave Wednesday to attend backto-back summits in Hangzhou, China and Vientiane, Laos. Coming five months from the end of Obama’s term, the White House has planned the trip as a moment to highlight his administra­tion’s seven-year effort to expand U.S. influence in Asia, including his push for massive free-trade and a landmark climate agreement with China.

White House officials said Obama will underscore the message even before leaving the U.S., heading first to Lake Tahoe for a series of meetings on conservati­on and then on to Hawaii’s remote Midway Atoll, where Obama recently expanded the Papahanaum­okuakea Marine National Monument.

White House officials said Monday that Obama’s stop will come with announceme­nts of new executive actions aimed at boosting clean energy production in the U.S. and mitigating the effect of climate change such as wildfires and drought.

Obama will keep up the drumbeat in China, where he is attending a meeting of the Group of 20 industrial and emerging-market economies. Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping are expected to offer an update on the nation’s progress toward ratifying the Paris agreement. White House officials have said they hope the historic climate change pact could enter into force by the end of the year.

But Obama’s climate change agenda will only be part of his busy schedule. He will meet Sunday with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the first meeting since a failed summer coup added new tensions to an already complex relationsh­ip.

Obama and Erdogan are slated to discuss the recent clashes between Turkish troops and Kurdish forces in northern Syria. The U.S. has criticized Turkey, a NATO ally, for the assault, saying the conflict distracts from the fight against the Islamic State group. Erdogan has said he plans to continue the operations until the Kurdish forces no longer pose a security threat to Ankara.

Obama’s schedule also includes a visit with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, whose bloody anti-drug campaign has drawn criticism from human rights activists. The president plans to raise those concerns with the new leader, deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said Monday.

Rhodes said Obama will also use the trip to make the case for the Trans-Pacific free-trade agreement, a massive multinatio­n deal that has stalled out in Congress amid fierce electionye­ar opposition from both parties.

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