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Blinken to embark on Asia trip to discuss N. Korea, China issues amid US policy review

The captured image from the website of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs shows Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifying in a hearing at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday. (US House Committee on Foreign Affairs website)
The captured image from the website of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs shows Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifying in a hearing at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday. (US House Committee on Foreign Affairs website)
WASHINGTON/SEOUL -- US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was set to embark on a trip to Asia on Sunday to discuss major challenges in the region, including China and North Korea, with two key US allies there -- Japan and South Korea.

The top US diplomat will first visit Tokyo where he will be joined by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin for a Two-Plus-Two meeting with their Japanese counterparts.

Austin left Saturday for a stop in Hawaii before his trip to Japan.

Both Blinken and Austin will visit South Korea beginning Wednesday for talks with their counterparts there that will also include a Two-Plus-Two meeting.

The State Department has said the secretaries will discuss a wide range of regional and global issues while visiting the two key US allies in Asia, including how to deal with North Korea.

The US is currently undergoing a comprehensive review of its North Korea policy that it says will create a new and different approach toward the North from those in the past.

A senior US diplomat said Blinken's trip to Asia will provide an important chance for US allies to put their input into the US' policy toward North Korea.

"Because we want to make sure to incorporate their input as we review all of the important aspects of our North Korea policy, and, in fact, when the secretary is in the region, I think this will be another great opportunity for our allies to provide senior-level input into our process," Sung Kim, acting assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, said earlier.

Kim said the review will likely be completed within weeks.

The Biden administration has yet to publicly offer any direct message to Pyongyang since coming into office on Jan. 20, but an earlier report said the new US administration has made several behind-the-scenes attempts to reach out to the North, although unsuccessfully so far.

Citing a senior official at the Biden administration, Reuters reported that the US had tried to make diplomatic attempts since mid-February.

A senior official at South Korea's foreign ministry, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Washington had informed Seoul of the attempts in advance.

A request to the State Department to confirm the report was not immediately answered.

The State Department said the US secretaries will also discuss how to jointly deal with what it calls increasing "competition" from China.

Blinken's first overseas trip as secretary comes after President Joe Biden hosted the first-ever summit of a regional forum known as the Quad, which under the former Trump administration was largely viewed as an anti-China coalition of countries that currently include Australia, India and Japan.

The Biden administration is seeking to shift the main focus of the grouping from any single country or issue in an apparent hope of attracting more US allies and partners to the regional forum.

"Of course, a coordinated approach to China is one of the elements that will be on the agenda in both countries," State Department spokesman Ned Price has said of Blinken's trip to Japan and Asia.

"China, at the same time, is not going to dominate the agenda."

Blinken will wrap up his Seoul visit on Thursday to head for Alaska, where he and US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan are set to meet with their Chinese counterparts.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki has said the US-China talks were specifically scheduled to come after the top US diplomat first had a chance to coordinate US policy toward China with the two key US allies in Asia.

"It was important to us that this administration's first meeting with Chinese officials be held on American soil, and occur after we have met and consulted closely with partners and allies in both Asia and Europe," she said earlier. (Yonhap)
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