Biden reassures U.S. allies in calls with leaders of Japan, South Korea,
Australia
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[November 12, 2020]
By Hyonhee Shin, Sakura Murakami and Simon Lewis
SEOUL/TOKYO/
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - In
their first calls with Joe Biden since the U.S. election, the leaders of
Japan, South Korea and Australia on Thursday reaffirmed plans to form
close ties with the president-elect to tackle issues including climate
change and regional security.
The three key Asian allies - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga,
South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Australian Prime Minister Scott
Morrison - join other global leaders in recognizing the Democratic
challenger's Nov. 3 victory over incumbent Donald Trump, who has so far
refused to concede.
Biden's projected win comes against a backdrop of China's growing
military and economic assertiveness in the region, and after years of
sometimes tumultuous relations between Asian allies and the United
States under Trump over issues including trade, defence and the
environment.
All sides expressed their determination to strengthen bilateral ties as
well as tackle global issues such as the coronavirus pandemic and
climate change, Biden's office said.
Japan's Suga said he spoke with Biden by telephone and confirmed the
importance of bilateral ties.
"President-elect Biden said that he looks forward to strengthening the
U.S.-Japan alliance and working together on achieving a free and open
Indo-Pacific," Suga said to reporters, in separate comments made at the
Prime Minister's Office.
Biden had earlier spoken to the leaders of Germany, the UK, Canada and
France, but China and Russia have so far held off passing on their
congratulations and speaking with the President-elect.
SECURITY AND PROSPERITY
Biden on Wednesday named Ron Klain as his White House chief of staff,
his first major appointment as he builds his administration. Anthony
Blinken, a diplomat and longtime confidant of Biden is seen as a likely
pick for Secretary of State or National Security Adviser, both key roles
for Asian allies.
Speaking to South Korea's Moon, Biden reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to
defend South Korea, highlighting the Asian ally as a "lynchpin of the
security and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific region," Moon's spokesman
Kang Min-seok said.
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President-elect Joe Biden speaks about health care and the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) during a brief news conference at
the theater serving as his transition headquarters in Wilmington,
Delaware, U.S. November 10, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"President Moon asked for close cooperation for the forward-looking
development of the bilateral alliance, and the denuclearisation and
peace on the Korean peninsula," Kang told a briefing.
"President-elect Biden said he would closely cooperate to resolve
the North Korean nuclear issue."
Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to work towards
denuclearisation at their unprecedented summit in 2018, but little
progress has been made since their second summit and working-level
talks collapsed last year.
While Biden has said he would not meet with Kim without
preconditions, he has also said he would embrace "principled
diplomacy" with North Korea.
South Korean officials are also hopeful that Biden will quickly
resolve a drawn-out, multi-billion dollar dispute with Washington
over the cost of thousands of U.S. troops on the peninsula.
Tackling the global coronavirus pandemic and climate change were key
themes in Biden's calls with all three leaders, readouts from
Biden's office showed.
Australia's Morrison said he spoke with Biden about emission
reduction technology, though a target for zero net emissions by 2050
was not discussed.
"I raised with the president-elect the similarity between the
president-elect's comments and policies regarding emissions
reduction technologies that we needed to achieve that, and we look
forward to working on those issues," Morrison told reporters in
Canberra.
Both Moon and Suga said they agreed to arrange summits with the new
president shortly after his inauguration in January.
Biden will also face the challenge of managing unresolved political
and economic disputes between South Korea and Japan, which have
threatened a military intelligence-sharing arrangement and
complicated U.S. efforts to counter China.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin in Seoul, Sakura Murakami in Tokyo, Simon
Lewis in Wilmington, Del. and Colin Packham in Sydney, Writing by
Josh Smith and Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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