logo
Trump's warning shot to Japan casts doubt on US defence guarantees in Asia

Trump's warning shot to Japan casts doubt on US defence guarantees in Asia

US President
Donald Trump has issued what analysts are calling an 'advance warning' to
Japan and
South Korea , signalling that his administration is preparing to make swingeing security and trade demands of Washington's closest allies in the Western Pacific.
Advertisement
Trump is expected to demand that both Tokyo and Seoul pay far more for the American troops stationed on their soil, threatening withdrawal if his terms are not met.
'The most important thing to note from his comments is that the United States is no longer committed to defending Japan, South Korea or Taiwan,' said Robert Dujarric, co-director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University's Tokyo campus.
'If you are an official in the Japanese government and you still believe in the US security umbrella, then you are the sort of person who also believes [Trump] has been faithful in all his marriages,' he told This Week in Asia.
01:01
Donald Trump declines to say if US would defend Taiwan against mainland China attack
Donald Trump declines to say if US would defend Taiwan against mainland China attack
For Tokyo and Seoul, the alarm bells were already ringing before Trump's remarks in the Oval Office last Thursday, when he called the long-standing US-Japan security treaty unfair and accused South Korea of exploiting America economically. Now, those bells are deafening.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China-US trade talks under way in London
China-US trade talks under way in London

RTHK

timean hour ago

  • RTHK

China-US trade talks under way in London

China-US trade talks under way in London China and US trade officials meet in Lancaster House in London. Photo: Reuters The first meeting of the China-US economic and trade consultation mechanism opened in London on Monday Vice Premier He Lifeng attended the meeting with the US delegation including Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer at Lancaster House. The meeting is aimed at shoring up a fragile truce in a trade dispute sparked by US tariffs that has roiled the global economy. The talks are expected to last at least a day and followed negotiations in Geneva last month that brought a temporary respite in the trade war. Lutnick did not attend the Geneva talks at which the countries struck a 90-day deal to roll back some of the triple-digit tariffs they had placed on each other. President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Donald Trump spoke by phone last Thursday in an attempt to put relations back on track. The meeting in London was helped by news that Beijing on Saturday approved some applications for rare-earth exports, while US aviation giant Boeing is to start sending commercial jets to China for the first time since April. (Agencies)

China-US trade talks under way in London
China-US trade talks under way in London

RTHK

timean hour ago

  • RTHK

China-US trade talks under way in London

China-US trade talks under way in London China and US trade officials meet in Lancaster House in London. Photo: Reuters The first meeting of the China-US economic and trade consultation mechanism opened in London on Monday Vice Premier He Lifeng attended the meeting with the US delegation including Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer at Lancaster House. The meeting is aimed at shoring up a fragile truce in a trade dispute sparked by US tariffs that has roiled the global economy. The talks are expected to last at least a day and followed negotiations in Geneva last month that brought a temporary respite in the trade war. Lutnick did not attend the Geneva talks at which the countries struck a 90-day deal to roll back some of the triple-digit tariffs they had placed on each other. President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Donald Trump spoke by phone last Thursday in an attempt to put relations back on track. The meeting in London was helped by news that Beijing on Saturday approved some applications for rare-earth exports, while US aviation giant Boeing is to start sending commercial jets to China for the first time since April. (Agencies)

Why Xi's decision to talk to Trump during trade crisis speaks volumes
Why Xi's decision to talk to Trump during trade crisis speaks volumes

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Why Xi's decision to talk to Trump during trade crisis speaks volumes

Chinese President Xi Jinping's decision to speak to US President Donald Trump directly last week, the first such call in four months, spoke volumes about the importance to Xi of finding a way through the morass of Sino-US relations. Xi's decision ran counter to the long-standing Chinese diplomatic approach during Sino-US tensions of the Chinese president refusing calls from the US president despite persistent entreaties. The White House had repeatedly predicted a Xi-Trump phone call only to fall silent when it did not materialise. Xi was almost certainly wary of speaking to Trump because of his track record of embarrassing foreign leaders , but I believe the central reason is rooted in the risk aversion in ties with Washington that has characterised Chinese foreign policy since the normalisation of relations in the 1970s. When I recently asked a Chinese academic why it is so hard for Xi to pick up the phone, he said that direct leader-to-leader negotiations in a time of crisis were not in the DNA of the Communist Party leadership. The historical record gives us ample evidence of this. As student protests rocked Beijing in 1989, ultimately ending in military forces suppressing the movement in Tiananmen Square, US president George H.W. Bush repeatedly requested a phone call with China's paramount leader Deng Xiaoping. The Chinese refused. Perplexed, Bush asked my China analytic team at the CIA why Deng would not take his call and why, during the crisis, Deng had disappeared from public view. Bush wondered whether he was sick or had been ousted. We explained that we had intelligence he was still in charge but that it was typical of Chinese leaders to 'go to ground' during a domestic crisis and not reappear or talk to foreign leaders until they were sure that the situation had stabilised.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store