No news is good news. That might have been the bumper
sticker for Ash Carter's first tour of Asia as
secretary of defense.
It was mostly quiet on the Eastern front. Carter consulted
with Japanese and South Korean leaders, gave pep talks to American troops,
stressed the U.S. military's stabilizing influence in the region and repeatedly
remarked that compared to the Middle East, the Asia-Pacific is calm and on a
prosperous track.
That's a welcome respite from crisis for a Pentagon chief
not yet two months into his tenure.
It's also a reminder of why the Obama administration's
much-advertised pivot to Asia, after more than a decade of all-consuming war in
Iraq and Afghanistan , keeps getting overshadowed by
rising towers of trouble in Iraq ,
Syria , Yemen and elsewhere across the Middle
East .
In Japan on Thursday, Carter told U.S. troops and their
families at Yokota air base that if they open any newspaper, "what you see
is the mess in the Middle East," whereas East Asia is "generally so
peaceful and therefore so prosperous."
"If you think about it," he later told troops at
Osan air base in South Korea ,
"the Middle East is in the headlines all
the time. But the reason this place isn't in the headlines is because you're
ready anytime to deter conflict on the peninsula." He was alluding to the
ever-present danger of North
Korea reigniting war with the South,
although the North of late has stirred up little trouble and provoked no
crises.
Carter practically laughed off the North's test-launching of
two short-range ballistic missiles shortly before he arrived on the peninsula,
where the missile threat is real and might one day be nuclear armed.
"If it's a welcoming message to me, I'm
flattered," he said.
The Asia trip, which Carter capped with a visit Saturday to
U.S. Pacific Command headquarters in Hawaii ,
was his second overseas venture since taking over in February for Chuck Hagel.
His first was to Afghanistan
and Kuwait .
On neither trip did he reveal much about his thinking on
possible changes to U.S.
defense policy. He has been publicly cautious, saying relatively little to
reporters.
Carter was expected to fly home to Washington on Sunday.
The fact that Carter plans to return to Asia next month to
attend an international security conference in Singapore
and to visit India is
evidence that he embraces President Barack Obama's view that the region is
increasingly important to U.S.
long-term national security and economic interests.
It also shows that Carter realizes the region's current calm
could collapse, or at least be shaken, if North Korea were to lash out at South
Korea or make new nuclear threats. China 's
pursuit of territorial claims in the South China Sea, which are disputed by Vietnam and
other countries in the region, also is a potential flash point.
"North Korea
is intent on continued provocation," Carter said in Seoul on Friday after meeting with his South
Korean counterpart, Han Min Koo.
Carter has an extensive history with the North Korea
nuclear problem. He was a member of a team, led by his mentor and longtime
friend, former Defense Secretary William Perry, which extensively reviewed U.S. policy toward the North in 1999, in part
based on a rare official visit to Pyongyang .
The review concluded that the "urgent focus" of U.S. policy
toward the North must be to end its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile
programs; 16 years later and after inconclusive and now moribund international
negotiations with the North, it has given up neither and remains defiant.
The Perry review warned that the cost of war on the Korean
peninsula would be unparalleled in U.S. experience since the 1950-53
Korean War.
"It is likely that hundreds of thousands of persons — U.S. , (South
and North Korean) — military and civilian — would perish, and millions of
refugees would be created," his report said.
On his inaugural trip to Asia
as Pentagon chief, Carter made no public reference to such gruesome
possibilities, although he did mention that the Korean peninsula remains
dangerous. He mainly emphasized the solid state of America 's
treaty alliances with Japan
and South Korea
and seemed thankful that, for now at least, the Asia-Pacific region is
relatively secure, leaving the more dramatic headlines to the Middle
East .
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.