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Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2016 11:43 AM
    WASHINGTON — China is ripping off America in trade and should be slapped with a fat import tax. U.S. military allies Japan and South Korea are freeloading and need to pull their weight. The pan-Pacific trade pact negotiated by the Obama administration is a "total disaster."
     
    With characteristic brashness, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has staked out uncompromising positions on Asia policy that could potentially roil U.S. relations with the region if he won the White House.
     
    That's already prompted some sharp commentary from usually friendly countries in Asia, and expressions of contempt from Republican foreign policy hands who have vowed to oppose Trump.
     
    Presidential hopefuls of both parties typically talk tough on China because of America's yawning trade deficit and the migration of U.S. manufacturing jobs to countries with cheaper labour. Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential nominee who lost the 2012 election, had vowed to declare China a currency manipulator on day one in office.
     
    Trump is making the same threat, but also proposing a 45 per cent tariff on Chinese imports into the U.S.
     
    And as the business mogul vows to "Make America Great Again!" he's poking a stick elsewhere in Asia.
     
     
    He has accused India and Vietnam, which have pulled closer to the U.S. as China's might has grown, of taking American jobs.
     
    And Trump is questioning what the U.S. gets out of its decades-old security alliances with Japan and South Korea, which host 80,000 U.S. forces — the backbone of the U.S. military presence in Asia.
     
    "If somebody attacks Japan, we have to immediately go and start World War III, okay? If we get attacked, Japan doesn't have to help us. Somehow, that doesn't sound so fair," Trump said on the stump in South Carolina Dec. 30.
     
    Trump also asserts that Japan and South Korea should pay for U.S. military protection, but overlooks that they already pay about half the cost of stationing U.S. forces on their soil.
     
    In Washington, more than 70 Republican national security experts have signed an open letter condemning Trump, saying his insistence on close allies like Japan paying vast sums for protection, "is the sentiment of a racketeer, not the leader of alliances that have served us so well since World War II."
     
    Asian commentators have responded to Trump's rise with a combination of puzzlement and anxiety.
     
    "U.S. politics is in disarray," lamented the Nikkei newspaper in an editorial after Trump took an important step toward clinching the Republican nomination to contest the November election when he won seven states in "Super Tuesday" primaries. "Japan has taken for granted U.S. leadership in international politics. How are we supposed to face this situation?" it asked.
     
     
    A commentary in South Korea's Dong-a-Ilbo newspaper said Seoul needs to start preparing for the possibility of a Trump presidency, which could kick the U.S. economy back into a recession by employing protectionist trade policies.
     
    On foreign policy, Trump is best known for promising to build a wall to stop illegal migration into the U.S. from Mexico, and for proposing a temporary ban on Muslims entering the U.S., which inflamed sentiments in the Muslim world. But on the campaign trail, he has also highlighted the need to reform U.S. trade relationships in Asia to bring jobs back to America.
     
    "I've not heard Trump criticized for that so much as his general super-nationalism. That aspect bothers people," said Richard Ellings, president of the National Bureau of Asian Research, who has been watching the reaction in Asia.
     
    Should Trump win the nomination, he would likely face Hillary Rodham Clinton for the Democrats. When she was secretary of state, Clinton led the Obama administration's outreach to Asia's fast-growing economies — although as a candidate she has come against the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade deal that she once extolled.
     
    Trump also opposes the TPP that he says would ultimately benefit China, although it is not among the 12 nations currently taking part.
     
     
    In a Republican debate last week he called the agreement "a total disaster," primarily because it doesn't address currency manipulation. He blames undervalued currencies for trade imbalances with Japan, China and other countries.
     
    Trump says that the sheer volume of U.S.-China trade gives Washington leverage over Beijing, although he exaggerates the size of imbalance. For years China was widely regarded as having undervalued its currency to help its exporters, but the yuan appreciated significantly against the dollar after 2010. Market forces appear to have played a greater role in a more recent depreciation in its value.
     
    Trump also sees the imposition of tariffs as a way to get Beijing to put pressure on its erstwhile ally North Korea to stop nuclear brinkmanship.
     
    "I mean, you've got this madman playing around with the nukes and it has to end and China has to do it," he told Fox News Jan. 8, referring to the unpredictable North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
     
    But while he slams China's commercial practices and resolves to boost the U.S. military presence in the disputed East and South China Seas to check Chinese "adventurism," Trump gives back-handed compliments to Beijing's leaders as being smarter than Washington's. He has likened them to Super Bowl winners competing against a high school football team.
     
    "I love China," Trump said at the Jan. 14 Republican debate. "I love the Chinese people but they laugh themselves, they can't believe how stupid the American leadership is."
     
    ALL EYES ON TRUMP AS CRUCIAL TUESDAY PRIMARIES APPROACH
     
    Republican leaders continued to agonize Thursday over how to stop Donald Trump's outsider drive for the presidential nomination ahead of Tuesday's crucial primary elections in Florida and Ohio, while even Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders mocked the brash billionaire in their latest debate.
     
    Tuesday's outcome could seal Clinton's overwhelming lead in delegates who choose the party nominee this summer. For Trump, the Florida and Ohio votes likely would strengthen his front-runner status but would not secure his nomination.
     
     
    Trump has been very popular with Republican primary voters but is feared unelectable in the November general election because of his off-colour language, his proposal to build a wall along the Mexican border and his denigration of Hispanics, Muslims and women.
     
    In his latest blast, Trump on Wednesday night told CNN that "I think Islam hates us."
     
    "There's a tremendous hatred," he added. "We have to get to the bottom of it. There is an unbelievable hatred of us."
     
    Trump has said he would temporarily ban non-citizen Muslims from entering the country.
     
    Trump's candidacy has left Republican officials with the uncomfortable idea that their second least favourite presidential candidate, ultra-conservative Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, may be the party's best last chance to stop him.
     
    Possible Cruz supporters include reluctant Senate colleagues and former presidential rivals with strong ties to major donors, who have feared Cruz's purist ideology but dread a Trump nomination even more.
     
    Cruz on Wednesday announced the backing of one former primary opponent, Carly Fiorina, and is seeking the backing of another, Jeb Bush, on Thursday.
     
    "It's an outsider year, and the most logical person to take on Trump based on past performance is Ted Cruz," said another former presidential opponent, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham. Earlier in the year, Graham likened the choice between Cruz and Trump to "being shot or poisoned."
     
     
    "He's not my preference," Graham said of Cruz. "But we are where we are. And if Trump wins Florida and Ohio, I don't know if we can stop him."
     
    In the latest Democratic debate on Wednesday night, Clinton faulted Sanders for repeatedly voting against a 2007 comprehensive immigration reform bill. He criticized her for opposing a 2007 effort to allow people who were in the country illegally to obtain driver's licenses.
     
    Had the immigration package passed back then, Clinton said, "a lot of the issues we are still discussing today would be in the rearview mirror."
     
    Sanders retorted that he opposed the legislation because it included a guest worker program "akin to slavery."
     
    Florida is home to nearly 1.8 million Hispanics, including about 15 per cent of the state's Democrats. Clinton has been getting about two-thirds of Hispanic votes so far.
     
    Both Clinton and Sanders found agreement in seeing Trump as worse on immigration than either of them. "We do not, as Donald Trump and others have done, resort to racism and xenophobia and bigotry," Sanders said.
     
    Sanders's long-shot candidacy remained very much alive after he pulled off an upset this week in the industrial state of Michigan, where polls had showed him trailing by as much as 20 percentage points.
     
     
    Clinton has won 762 pledged delegates compared to 549 for Sanders, with 10 delegates from recent primaries still to be allocated. When superdelegates are included, Clinton leads 1,223 to 574, more than halfway to the 2,383 needed to win the Democratic nomination. Superdelegates are party and elected officials who can vote for any candidate.
     
    In the Republican race for delegates, Trump has 458 and Cruz has 359. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio has 151 delegates and Kasich has 54. It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president.
     
    Rubio, the favourite of the party mainstream, has faded after he briefly adopted Trump's insulting debate style. He trails Trump in his home state, Florida.

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