A viewer’s guide for Obama’s Asian agenda
By Ian Bremmer President Obama embarks today on a tour of East Asia, a region central to U.S. geopolitical interests and its economic recovery. The primary goal is “strategic reassurance,” a term Deputy Secretary of State Jim Steinberg has used to describe U.S. relations with China. On Friday, he’ll reassure Japan’s brand new Prime Minister ...
By Ian Bremmer
President Obama embarks today on a tour of East Asia, a region central to U.S. geopolitical interests and its economic recovery. The primary goal is “strategic reassurance,” a term Deputy Secretary of State Jim Steinberg has used to describe U.S. relations with China.
On Friday, he’ll reassure Japan’s brand new Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama that, despite well-publicized recent frictions in U.S.-Japanese relations and a broader U.S. engagement with China, his administration considers ties with Japan a cornerstone of U.S. foreign policy. And he’ll seek some reassurance that the new DPJ government isn’t about to revisit key assumptions in the relationship. Hatoyama will likely take the opportunity to “clarify” his view on the importance of the security partnership. Throw in a highly publicized Obama speech on Saturday, and we can expect an easing of suspicion and a lot of warm smiles, especially since the two sides now appear to have a deal on a joint-commission to resolve the Okinawa troops and base relocation issues.
On Sunday, Obama will be in Singapore, where he’ll reassure Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that the US isn’t planning on reducing its Asian presence anytime soon. He’ll then join the festivities at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit. During the meetings, there will be early discussion of an “Asian Economic Community” and rumors that Obama is involved in discussion with ASEAN leaders on a U.S.-ASEAN free trade agreement — though he’ll more likely simply be offering reassurance that his government hasn’t set its trade agenda on indefinite hold. The meeting will end with public pledges from all sides to reject protectionism, the sort of empty reassurances we’ve seen in recent months at G20 meetings in Washington and London. Much of the media focus will be on the silk shirts and blouses inspired by Singapore’s Peranakan culture that the leaders will be wearing.
More interesting are the side meetings that we’ll hear much less about. Obama is scheduled to sit down with Myanmar’s prime minister to reassure him that the United States is willing to engage the country’s military junta if there’s any prospect that engagement might yield results. Back home, Obama will reassure critics in Washington that he won’t move to lift sanctions until Myanmar’s generals offer something of substance. He’s also scheduled to meet with Indonesian President Yudhoyono to assure him that the U.S. views the emerging regional player as a valuable local partner, and with Russia’s President Medvedev to assure him that his administration is serious about improving strained relations with Moscow.
On Monday, Obama heads for Shanghai and Beijing for a three-day visit that includes some sightseeing and a Q&A with Chinese students around meetings with President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao. The talking points for these sessions are nearly as ambitious as what you’d expect from one of those G20 meetings. There will be discussion of the recently contentious U.S.-Chinese trade relationship, energy, human rights, stability in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the nuclear programs in North Korea and Iran. Obama can reassure China’s leaders that he seeks mutually profitable engagement with the one subject he’s NOT likely to bring up: The value of China’s currency. The Chinese wouldn’t welcome the discussion, and Obama has no interest in inviting the Chinese to comment on the state of the U.S. economy and Washington’s role in it.
If there’s any tangible progress from Obama’s time in China, it will be on climate change/green energy issues. There may well be an agreement to expand joint development and investment in renewable energy technology. It won’t be a true “breakthrough,” but given the low likelihood that anything especially important comes out of climate change meetings in Copenhagen next month, the Obama team will use any sign of modest progress to reassure skeptics of his commitment on the issue and to tout the trip as a success.
On the way home, Obama will stop off in Seoul to tell South Korean President Lee Myung-bak that KORUS, the U.S.-South Korean free trade agreement, isn’t dead. He’ll also reassure Lee that, though the US won’t reduce troop levels on the peninsula, Washington can help make their stay a little easier for South Korea’s government to manage.
Ian Bremmer is president of Eurasia Group.
JACQUES WITT/AFP/Getty Images
Ian Bremmer is the president of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media. He is also the host of the television show GZERO World With Ian Bremmer. Twitter: @ianbremmer
More from Foreign Policy

America Is a Heartbeat Away From a War It Could Lose
Global war is neither a theoretical contingency nor the fever dream of hawks and militarists.

The West’s Incoherent Critique of Israel’s Gaza Strategy
The reality of fighting Hamas in Gaza makes this war terrible one way or another.

Biden Owns the Israel-Palestine Conflict Now
In tying Washington to Israel’s war in Gaza, the U.S. president now shares responsibility for the broader conflict’s fate.

Taiwan’s Room to Maneuver Shrinks as Biden and Xi Meet
As the latest crisis in the straits wraps up, Taipei is on the back foot.