
US President Barack Obama (L) shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama
13 November 2009
Obama vows to deepen US engagement in Pacific region and Japan PM, Obama agree to review US-Japan alliance
TOKYO - Barack Obama insisted on Friday that the United States was a "Pacific" power and vowed to deepen its engagement in the region as he set foot in Asia for the first time as US president.
"The United States will strengthen our alliances, build new partnerships and we will be part of multilateral efforts and regional institutions that advance regional security and prosperity," he said in Tokyo as he launched his four-nation tour.
"The alliance between the United States and Japan is a foundation for security and prosperity, not just for our two countries, but for the Asian-Pacific region," said Obama at a press conference alongside Japan's Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama.
The US president's trip comes just over a year after he won the election to the White House.
Obama -- travelling without his wife Michelle -- leaves a clutch of domestic crises behind as he seeks to counter charges that US influence has frayed in Asia, with Washington distracted by its deep economic slump and the sapping wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In Tokyo, he promised Americans a "transparent" decision soon on whether to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan, after apparent divides within his administration on strategy were leaked to the press.
The US president also sought to ease a simmering row with Japan over US bases on the southern island of Okinawa, where the US military presence is intensely controversial and has strained ties between the decades-old allies.
"Our goal remains the same, that is to provide for the defence of Japan with minimal intrusion on the lives of the people who share the space."
But Hatoyama, who ended half a century of conservative political domination, has vowed that Japan will be more assertive in its US alliance and said he may scrap an unpopular plan to relocate a US military base on Okinawa.
"This is an issue with difficulties. But it will get more difficult to solve as time goes by," said the premier, who has been in office for just two months.
Opposition to the US bases has simmered for decades, with locals complaining about aircraft noise, pollution, the risk of accidents and crimes committed by servicemen, especially a high-profile 2005 gang-rape.
On Sunday, more than 20,000 Okinawans rallied against the continued presence of 47,000 troops in Japan, a legacy of its post-war occupation, and a smaller protest was held in Tokyo Friday.
In another sign of his government's more assertive stance towards Washington, Hatoyama also said he will end a naval refuelling mission that has since 2001 supported the US campaign in Afghanistan.
However, his government this week pledged five billion US dollars in assistance for Afghanistan to help stabilise the war-torn country that is Obama's biggest foreign policy challenge.
Hatoyama has, nevertheless, voiced admiration for Obama and stressed similarities between their Democratic parties, which both defeated conservative governments on a promise of change.
The leaders also agreed to work together to battle climate change and the spread of nuclear weapons, including the threat posed by North Korea, which has in the past test-fired missiles across the Japanese islands.
Obama and Hatoyama said they "aspire to reduce" each nation's greenhouse emissions by 80 percent by 2050, and to seek a global cut of 50 percent by then -- matching a goal set by the Group of Eight rich nations.
Asked whether he would visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the cities destroyed by US atomic bombs in World War II, Obama said: "I certainly would be honoured, it would be meaningful for me to visit those two cities in the future."
On the next leg of his trip, Obama will meet many regional leaders for the first time at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Singapore.
He will also become the first US president to sit down with all 10 leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, including US foe Myanmar.
Obama will then head to China in the three-day centrepiece of his tour, with top global security issues, along with trade and currency differences, on the agenda, before wrapping up his trip in South Korea.
But he will not specifically mention Tibet in his speech on Asia policy on Saturday, a senior aide said, following claims Washington has downplayed the issue to avoid angering China.
- AFP/ir