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Trump names Admiral Harry Harris new US ambassador to South Korea

By Yonhap

Published : May 19, 2018 - 13:46

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US President Donald Trump on Friday named Harry Harris, current commander of the US Pacific Command, his first ambassador to South Korea at a critical diplomatic juncture on the Korean Peninsula.

The White House made the announcement just weeks ahead of a nuclear summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and days ahead of a meeting in Washington between Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Harris was reported to be Trump’s pick last month after initially being tapped as the US ambassador to Australia.

It is the first time Trump has formally named an ambassador to Seoul since he took office last year.


US Admiral Harry Harris (AP/Yonhap) US Admiral Harry Harris (AP/Yonhap)

The White House said Harris is a “highly decorated, combat proven Naval officer with extensive knowledge, leadership, and geopolitical expertise in the Indo-Pacific region.”

If confirmed by the Senate, Harris will serve as Washington‘s top envoy to Seoul at a time when the allies have been seeking close coordination on a range of issues, including North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and bilateral trade.

The Navy admiral was born in Japan to a Japanese mother and American father. He has led the US Pacific Command in Hawaii since May 2015, overseeing the 28,500-strong US Forces Korea and waters near the Korean Peninsula.

On foreign policy issues, he is considered a hawk, along with the latest additions to Trump‘s national security team -- Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton.

Pompeo reportedly wanted Harris in Seoul, not Canberra.

The commander told a congressional hearing in February that he believes the North’s leader doesn‘t want nukes to simply safeguard his regime, but he is “after reunification (of the Koreas) under a single, communist system.”

Harris also called for increasing economic and diplomatic sanctions on Pyongyang until it abandons its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

At a separate congressional hearing in March, he struck a cautious note on the prospect of a Trump-Kim meeting.

“I just think that we have to go into this eyes wide open,”

Harris said, adding that if the US succumbed to the North’s longstanding demand to remove its troops from the South, Kim “would do a victory dance.”

Trump and Kim are set to meet in Singapore on June 12 to discuss the denuclearization of the regime, although Pyongyang threw the high-stakes summit into doubt this week. It protested that the US was demanding the “unilateral” dismantlement of its nuclear weapons program and also blamed ongoing air combat drills between South Korea and the US for undermining the growing peace mood on the peninsula.

Responding to the threat to call off the summit, Trump said Thursday that he does not have the so-called Libya model in mind for North Korea‘s denuclearization and offered to provide strong security guarantees to the regime.

Libya surrendered its weapons of mass destruction program in 2003 in return for sanctions relief, but its then-leader Moammar Gadhafi was ultimately toppled from power and killed by NATO-backed rebel forces in 2011.

North Korea made clear this week that it would not meet the same fate as the north African country.

Moon is due in Washington next Tuesday to meet with Trump and coordinate the allies’ positions ahead of what would be the first-ever US-North Korea summit, a meeting he has helped engineer.

The South Korean president met with Kim at the Demilitarized Zone dividing the Koreas last month. They agreed to pursue “complete denuclearization” and a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War.

Trump all but nominated Victor Cha, who served on the White House National Security Council during the George W. Bush administration, as his top envoy to Seoul last year. But the formal nomination never took place amid reports Cha clashed with the Trump administration over its considerations of a limited military strike on North Korea. (Yonhap)