Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is set to begin his first trip to
Asia in his new role and will attempt to forge cooperation with
important U.S. allies in the region, while downplaying fears that the
U.S. is looking to isolate itself diplomatically.
Tillerson will find shared anxiety at the North's
saber-rattling but less agreement about how to deal with it, and
unresolved questions about how the United States and China, the world's
two largest economies, can manage growing differences.
Japan and South Korea, which host American troops and
are already within range of North Korean missiles, support U.S. efforts
to increase diplomatic and economic pressure on Pyongyang.
The three navies were also conducting drills
Wednesday in seas east of the divided Korean Peninsula and north of
Japan to promote interoperability, the U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet said.But China remains conflicted about how to treat its traditional ally for fear of triggering its collapse.
Adding to the combustible mix of military tension and
the region's historic rivalries is another factor — uncertainty about
U.S. foreign policy under the Trump administration.
Tillerson, who arrives in Tokyo late Wednesday at the
start of his four-day, three-nation tour, could provide some
reassurance to nervy allies. He will meet Thursday with Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe and Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida.
The former Exxon Mobil CEO has adopted a low profile
during his six weeks as secretary of state. The State Department
Correspondents' Association expressed disappointment Wednesday that
Tillerson was traveling to Asia without a full contingent of the
diplomatic press corps or even a pool reporter on his plane — although
it is taking a reporter from the conservative-leaning website, the
Independent Journal Review.
President Trump's rise to power has raised anxiety in
Asian capitals. During last year's election campaign, Trump asked
whether allies like Japan and South Korea contribute enough for their
own defense or should get their own nuclear weapons. He also questioned
the fundamentals of four decades of U.S. diplomacy with China.
Trump has allayed some of those concerns since taking
office. Trump hosted Abe at his Florida resort last month, and when
Tillerson goes to Beijing Saturday, he is expected to arrange a
much-anticipated visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to the U.S.
"The U.S. allies, Japan and South Korea, want to know
that the United States is going to continue to defend them but also is
going to show a certain amount of finesse and diplomatic skills in
dealing with China and with North Korea," said Robert Dujarric, the
director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple
University's campus in Tokyo.
North Korea will be a top priority on all Tillerson's
stops. The State Department says Tillerson wants to discuss "fresh"
approaches. Administration officials say all options are on the table,
including military ones, but signs are that the U.S. for starters wants
to see rigorous implementation of existing sanctions against Pyongyang.
There appears to be little desire for now to
negotiate with North Korea, unless it commits to denuclearization, which
it shows no sign of doing.
The North conducted two nuclear tests and 24
ballistic missile tests last year, deepening concern in Washington that
it could soon develop a nuclear-tipped missile capable of reaching the
U.S. mainland — something Trump has vowed won't happen.
The U.S. is currently involved in annual military
drills in South Korea that North Korea regards as rehearsal for
invasion. In a show of defiance, the North fired four ballistic missiles
into ocean off Japan last week. The next day, the U.S. began bringing
in equipment for the long-planned deployment in South Korea of a missile
defense system, known by its acronym, THAAD.
That has raised tensions with China, which says the
THAAD's radar could peer into Chinese territory, weakening its own
nuclear deterrent. The U.S. says the system is intended to be used only
against North Korea.
A Trump administration official told Reuters that Tillerson's position on THAAD would be uncompromising.
"THAAD is non-negotiable," the official told Reuters.
"This is one of those things where Beijing is just going to have to
adapt to or live in a perpetual cycle of outrage.
"But this is a chance to lay down a marker on what we
would need from China and to hear from them what they would want to see
in return. Everyone is eyes-open that they are not going to give us
anything on North Korea without something in return."