Trump administration plans to nominate
Harry Harris as South Korea envoy
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[April 25, 2018]
By David Brunnstrom and John Walcott
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration plans to nominate Admiral Harry Harris, the head of the
U.S. Pacific Command already nominated to be the next U.S. ambassador to
Australia, to fill the long-vacant post of ambassador to South Korea
instead, U.S. officials said on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump's nominee to be secretary of state, Mike Pompeo,
had asked Harris to take the key post in Seoul, which has been vacant
since Trump took office in January last year, a source with knowledge of
the situation said.
Three U.S. officials confirmed the plan to nominate Harris, who was in
Washington on Tuesday for a Senate committee hearing on his Australia
nomination. That hearing was postponed indefinitely.
“The national security situation on the Korean Peninsula is of the
highest priority,” one of the officials said when asked to confirm the
switch in nominations. "Our relationship with Australia is and remains
steadfast."
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity. The White House did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Trump nominated Harris, who is known for hawkish views on China's
military expansion, to serve as ambassador to Australia in February, but
filling the Seoul post has become even more of a priority as diplomatic
efforts to resolve the crisis over North Korea's nuclear weapons have
intensified.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in is due to meet North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un on Thursday and Trump has said he will hold an unprecedented
summit with Kim himself in May or June.
Pompeo told his Senate confirmation hearing this month that filling
Seoul and a handful of other diplomatic posts required "immediate
attention."
"I will find what I believe to be the best fit to execute America's
diplomatic mission around the world," he said.
The White House said in February it was no longer considering Victor
Cha, a former official who questioned the wisdom of a preventative
military strike on North Korea being mulled by the administration
earlier this year.
WASTING TIME?
Harris told the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee last month
Washington could not be overly optimistic about the outcome of a
Trump-Kim summit and must go into it with "eyes wide open."
He said he was encouraged by the prospect of a summit, but North Korea
remained the biggest Asia-Pacific security threat.
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U.S. Navy Admiral Harry Harris Jr, head of the Pacific Command,
attends at a Fullerton Lecture on "Challenges, Opportunities and
Innovation in the Indo-Asia-Pacific", in Singapore October 17, 2017.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Harris said he believed Kim would like to see reunification of the
Korean peninsula under his rule, and sought respect, status and
security through the possession of nuclear weapons.
Trump said on Tuesday Kim had been "very honorable" and discussions
on a planned summit were going well, but tempered expectations for
any quick denuclearization deal by saying "it may be we're all
wasting a lot of time."
Andrew Shearer, a former Australian national security adviser now at
Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies think
tank, said there would be "intense disappointment" in Australia -
like South Korea, a U.S. ally - about the switch in nominations.
"Harris is well known and highly respected there, and his nomination
enjoyed strong bipartisan support. There's no doubt he would have
been a highly effective advocate at a time when there is growing
debate in Australia about the U.S. alliance and its implications for
the country's substantial economic interests in China.
"It would be surprising if the Australia government doesn’t feel let
down," he said. "That said, no-one doubts the urgency of the North
Korea threat and Canberra has little choice but to take it on the
chin."
Australia’s foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said Australia was not
offended by the sudden withdrawal of Harris.
"While we would have welcomed Admiral Harris as ambassador here in
Australia, we understand there are significant challenges for the
United States on the Korean peninsula,” Bishop told reporters after
a service to commemorate ANZAC Day in Sydney.
"We look forward to a new ambassador being nominated as soon as
possible."
Australia has been without a U.S. ambassador for 18 months.
(Additional reporting by Alison Bevege in SYDNEY; Rporting by David
Brunnstrom, John Walcott and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Editing
by James Dalgleish, Robert Birsel)
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