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Saturday, November 4, 2017

Trump toched down in Japan, first in five-country Asian tour

Trump toched down in Japan, first in five-country Asian tour
4/ 5 stars - "Trump toched down in Japan, first in five-country Asian tour" President Donald Trump arrives in Japan late Saturday ahead of a 13-day trek through Asia that he hopes will divert from a bruising pol...
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President Donald Trump arrives in Japan late Saturday ahead of a 13-day trek through Asia that he hopes will divert from a bruising political controversy back home. Trump avoided the incendiary, bellicose rhetoric that has often defined his public remarks about the North Korean threat in his first remarks of his five-nation tour. But in his first official remarks in the region, at a joint US-Japanese military base just outside of Tokyo, Trump sent a clear message to North Korea and the rest of the region that American military might and strong US alliances in the region remain a critical deterrent. "Our brave warriors are the last bulwark against threats to the dreams of people in America and Japan and all across the world," Trump said. "You are the greatest hope for people who desire to live in freedom and harmony and you are the greatest threat to tyrants and dictators who seek to prey on the innocent.

Trading in his suit jacket for a flight jacket moments after taking the stage at Yokota Air Base, Trump praised the US-Japan military alliance, thanked US troops for keeping "us all safe" and talked up US military prowess in the region. The remarks served to help set the tone for the President's Asian tour that will take him next to South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippines for nearly two weeks of powerhouse diplomacy, much of which will focus on rallying other regional powers to step up their efforts to pressure North Korea into abandoning its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Trump's remarks were devoid the kinds of direct threats he has previously aimed at the North Korean regime, with the President instead choosing to focus on the US-Japanese alliance and the peaceful aims of US military might in the region. "You put hope in every soul that yearns for peace," Trump told the assembled troops.

 

Air Force One landed at the US-controlled Yokota Air Base outside Tokyo at about 9:37 p.m. ET Saturday (10:37 a.m. Sunday local time). Trump is due to address American servicemen and women stationed at the facility before beginning his official visit with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. On his first swing through a continent gripped with tension over a nuclear standoff on its eastern edge, Trump will carry out high-stakes talks with the leaders of Japan, South Korea, and China, and attend days of summits in Vietnam and the Philippines. "


Before arriving in Japan, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he expects to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin and hopes to enlist his help in changing North Korea's behavior. He will likely meet with Putin on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vietnam. "I think it's expected that we'll meet. We want Putin's help on North Korea," he told reporters. Trump had previously said a meeting with Putin was possible. It's a slog of a presidential trip, one that became longer this week after Trump announced he would spend an extra day in Manila to attend the East Asia Summit. The last US President to spend this long in Asia was George H.W. Bush in 1992 -- and he ended the trip by vomiting in the Japanese prime minister's lap.

On the eight-hour flight from Hawaii, however, Trump dismissed concerns about the length of his trip. "It is grueling, they tell me. But fortunately, historically that has not been a problem for me," Trump said. "I'll let you know if I don't stay fresh. If I don't stay fresh, you'll be the first to tell me." At his first stop here in Tokyo, Trump is due to enjoy a round of golf and a steak dinner with Abe -- one of his closest foreign counterparts -- before sitting down for formal talks. The two men are expected to confer about North Korea, an area where they are largely in alignment. Abe hopes to adopt a tougher military stance against Pyongyang, altering a decades-long pacifist approach.

The two are also expected to discuss trade, though they don't see eye-to-eye on the issue. Trump has withdrawn the US from the Trans Pacific Partnership, a decision the Abe has criticized.


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