By now, Obama was supposed to have showcased the long-promised
benefits of his strategic shift toward Asia as he nears his final
year in office. Instead, he has spent much of his time focused on
deadly Islamist attacks half a world away.
White House aides have fretted privately that the timing could not
have been worse.
After struggling for years to prove that his so-called "Asia pivot"
was real, they were hoping to gain more traction now that it has
started bearing fruit in the form of a new signature trade deal and
expanding security ties aimed at countering a rising China.
But, as one U.S. official said, it did not happen exactly like
planned.
As Obama prepared to wrap up a four-summit trip in Kuala Lumpur on
Sunday, he faced difficult challenges on his return to Washington -
and few good options.
At home, the political clamor is growing for a tougher approach to
Islamic State in response to the deadly attacks in Paris, and
majority Republicans - as well of some of Obama's fellow Democrats -
show no sign of abandoning efforts to block U.S. acceptance of more
Syrian refugees.
Those same issues have dogged Obama during eight days of travel
overseas, leaving the president and his aides to make their case.
Unexpectedly from a president widely known as "no-drama Obama",
there was a rare flash of anger when he spoke during his trip of
"hysterical" politicians back home whom he accused of trying to bar
Syrian child refugees from U.S. soil to score political points.
Obama has been to the G20 meeting in Antalya, Turkey, the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gathering in the
Philippines capital Manila, and the East Asian and Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summits in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.
Saturday was an example of how Obama's carefully choreographed trip
had to be shifted on the fly.
In a speech on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit meant to focus on
moving forward on the 12-member Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
trade agreement, Obama started off with sharpened language on
terrorism as fresh details were emerging about a deadly hotel siege
in Mali.
He vowed that the United States would be "relentless," saying:
"We’ll continue to root out terrorist networks."
Obama’s latest flurry of summitry illustrated how his strategy of
"rebalancing" U.S. policy toward Asia-Pacific countries has
consistently run into the geopolitical reality that the persistently
volatile Middle East cannot be ignored.
CAUGHT OFF GUARD
But even when Obama was able to focus on Asian matters, he sometimes
seemed to be caught off guard.
At a townhall-style meeting with Southeast Asian youth in Kuala
Lumpur – the kind of event where Obama normally gets softball
questions from adoring audiences - a young Malaysian told the
president the TPP was "a very elitist deal" and pressed him to
defend it.
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Another questioner challenged Obama to raise corruption and human
rights with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, and the president
promised he would "definitely" do that. But Obama was careful not
to lodge any strong public accusations against summit host Najib -
although the U.S. leader brought up the issues with him in private
and met civil society activists on Saturday to hear their concerns.
To be sure, Obama also used his two Asia stops to nudge China over
its growing assertiveness in territorial disputes with its neighbors
in the South China Sea, which aides said was among his priorities
for the trip.
But at the ASEAN summit, the final Chairman's statement avoided any
direct criticism of China, reflecting divisions among Beijing’s
smaller neighbors on how far to go in speaking out, even
collectively, against the region’s biggest power.
The Philippines, a U.S. treaty ally, had sought stronger language on
the South China Sea but did not prevail on all that it wanted, a
source close to the matter said. The White House declined comment.
Obama’s meeting last weekend at the G20 summit in Antalya, Turkey,
also produced some unscripted moments.
He had an unscheduled encounter with Russian President Vladimir
Putin, and although cameras caught the two leaning in close in
intense discussion there was no sign they made any significant
progress narrowing their differences over the Syrian conflict.
At the APEC summit in Manila, Obama held his first formal meeting
with Canada’s young new prime minister Justin Trudeau, who basked in
the kind of "rock star" treatment that the U.S. president enjoyed at
the beginning of his term.
The talks seemed to go well on the surface and could help repair
frayed U.S.-Canada ties.
But there was some disappointment among U.S. officials that Trudeau
stuck to his campaign pledge to remove Canada’s warplanes from the
coalition fighting Islamic State, despite the view that he could
have used the Paris attacks as a reason to hold off on the move.
Obama had also hoped to gain greater attention for his message on
the fight against climate change, an important legacy-shaping
initiative. But that too was nearly drowned out by the focus on
extremist violence.
(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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