2014年4月23日 星期三

Obama Lands in Tokyo On First Stop in Asia Tour 建構「亞洲版北約」 抗衡中國

日媒:建構「亞洲版北約」 抗衡中國
日本頗負盛名的《外交學者》(The Diplomat)雜誌最近指出,亞洲要形成一個類似北約(NATO)的多邊安全組織,
不如外界想像中困難,尤其當中國採取武力手段對付台灣或釣魚台問題時.....詳請點閱→http://bit.ly/PsMMu5
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Obama Lands in Tokyo On First Stop in Asia Tour


President Obama walks off Air Force One as he arrives at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, on April 23, 2014.
President Obama walks off Air Force One as he arrives at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, on April 23, 2014. Jim Watson—AFP/Getty Images

President Obama arrives in Tokyo on the first stop in a week-long tour of Japan, Malaysia, South Korea and the Philippines, aiming to both reassure allies and position the U.S. as a leader in the region


President Barack Obama arrived in Tokyo Wednesday evening on the first stop in a four-country tour intended to reaffirm the United States’ commitment to its Pacific allies.
Obama will be visiting South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines in addition to Japan, CNN reports, as the United States tries to position itself as a counterbalance to China’s growing economic strength in the region.
The President will seek to further progress on a trade deal with Japan, and will dine with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Wednesday at the famous Sukiyabashi Jiro, where food service lasts 20 minutes and costs around $292 per head. He will visit an innovation center in Kuala Lumpur and negotiate a new agreement that could boost the United States’ military presence in the region in the Philippines.
Obama’s long-touted “pivot to Asia” ran into obstacles last year when the president canceled a trip to visit Pacific allies amidst the debt ceiling debacle. Since then, distractions including the Iran nuclear talks, the civil war in Syria and unrest in Ukraine have hampered Obama’s aim to exert U.S. influence in the region.
With the current transportation disasters in Asia—the sinking of the South Korean ferry, and the disappearance of the Malaysian Airlines flight—Obama is entering a region engrossed with its own domestic problems. “The South Korea visit could really be overshadowed by the ferry,” an unnamed senior administration official told the New York Times.

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