WASHINGTON - United States President Barack Obama arrives in Tokyo on Thursday
for the first stop of his four-nation trip to Asia, but an ongoing disagreement
over realignment of US forces in Japan, new roadblocks towards a free-trade
agreement (FTA) with South Korea and continuing tussles over climate change,
trade and currency issues with China have led the White House to play down
expectations over the trip.
When Obama lands in Tokyo and meets with new Japanese Prime Minister Yukio
Hatoyama, one of the top issues for discussion will likely be the new
government's stance on realigning US forces based on the southern island of
Okinawa.
Okinawa is home to two-thirds of the 47,000 US military
personnel based in Japan but relations between Okinawans and the US military
have declined since 1996 when three US servicemen were convicted in the rape of
a 12-year-old girl.
An estimated 21,000 protesters gathered on Sunday in Nago City in Okinawa to
call on US forces to leave and support Hatoyama's Democratic Party of Japan
(DPJ) in reopening bilateral agreements with the US on troop realignment.
Still, experts here in Washington suggest it is unlikely that the issue will be
resolved in Obama's upcoming trip.
"I think there's an agreement not to try and solve this on this trip," Richard
Bush, director of the Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies at the
Brookings Institution, told Inter Press Service.
"I think the important thing is [for Obama] not to force the issue in what is
an early time in the [DPJ's] administration. The DPJ government took office on
the September 16, less than two months ago, and have never governed before," he
said.
"Public support for the [US-Japan] alliance remains strong and so it's not as
if we're sailing into gale force winds of opposition from the Japanese public,"
Bush continued. "This environment of public approval for the alliance makes it
more likely that something can be worked out."
In the South Korean leg of the trip, expectations are low that Obama will make
substantive progress on a US-South Korean free trade agreement, which Seoul has
been touting as an important component to the US-South Korean relationship.
United States access to South Korean automobile markets has emerged as the key
sticking point in negotiations with Seoul.
"We want to ensure that the FTA does provide adequate access for US automobiles
to the Korean market. But the timing of when this can be done and what is
politically feasible in the very political context surrounding trade that we
deal with, that's a question above my pay grade," Jeffrey Bader, senior
director for East Asian affairs for the National Security Council, said on
Friday.
The stop in Seoul will also certainly include discussion of North Korea, the
future of the six-party talks, and the White House's announcement today that a
small interagency team would visit Pyongyang - likely before the end of the
year - to jumpstart stalled denuclearization talks.
While the contentious issues of military basing and the FTA will likely prevent
meaningful deliverables from negotiations in Japan and South Korea, Obama will
attempt to compensate with public appearances including news conferences in
Beijing, Tokyo and Seoul, a speech on US-Asian engagement in Tokyo, and a
town-hall event with young people in Shanghai.
Indeed, US-ties with Seoul and Tokyo have been strong on Afghanistan, with
Japan pledging US$5 billion in Afghan aid Tuesday. South Korea has also
committed to send a provincial reconstruction team to Afghanistan and to
provide military security for that team.
Despite the current disagreements on US basing in Okinawa and the US-South
Korean FTA, the visits to Tokyo and Seoul will be an opportunity for Obama to
reaffirm the longstanding relationships between the US and its closest allies
in northeast Asia.
The four-day visit to China will require a different type of diplomacy as Obama
seeks to find new areas for US-Chinese cooperation, especially in the light of
the recent global financial crisis.
While the White House has attempted to coax China to consume more domestically
and allow its currency to strengthen, it seems unlikely that Washington will
push Beijing - currently the biggest US creditor - for serious concessions
during the visit.
But in an interview with Reuters, Obama did say, "Currency, along with a host
of other issues, will come up," during his trip to China and in talks with
Chinese President Hu Jintao.
Among those issues will certainly be climate change, where the US and China -
two of the world's largest carbon emitters - will need to cooperate in order to
bring about a meaningful global climate change agreement in Copenhagen in
December.
The trip to China will allow Obama and his team to gain exposure to the myriad
of voices in Shanghai and Beijing who represent both the current and future
Chinese leadership.
"China is in the midst of a significant political transition, and President
Obama should make sure to stop by for a chat with the next generation of
Chinese leaders - Li Keqiang, Li Yuanchao and Xi Jinping," wrote the Council on
Foreign Relations' director of Asian Studies, Elizabeth C Economy. "In just
two-and-half years, they will be the ones President Obama faces across the
dinner table."
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