Los Angeles Times - 06.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

LATIMES.COM TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019A


THE WORLD


PALIKIR, Micronesia —
On the last stop Monday of a
three-nation tour aimed at
reasserting U.S. influence in
the Asia-Pacific region, Sec-
retary of State Michael R.
Pompeo gained widely ex-
pected assurances that the
remote, tropical islands of
Micronesia would remain on
America’s side in the stand-
off with China.
But Pompeo emerged
empty-handed a day earlier
in Sydney after seeking Aus-
tralia’s support in shielding
international cargo ships
that traverse the crucial
Strait of Hormuz from pos-
sible Iranian intervention as
part of Washington’s esca-
lating conflict with Tehran.
Australia hesitated in part
out of concern about alienat-
ing its other key allies, in-
cluding China.
On the island of Pohnpei,
part of the Federated States
of Micronesia, Pompeo
urged officials to resist Chi-
na’s influence as Beijing at-
tempts to “redraw” the Pa-
cific in its “authoritarian im-
age.”
Though it was only for a
few hours, Pompeo became
the first sitting American
secretary of State to visit Mi-
cronesia, a grouping of hun-
dreds of islands in the west-
ern Pacific.
Pompeo’s trip focused on
what the administration is
branding the Indo-Pacific, a
vast part of the globe the
U.S. once dominated but
where it has lost ground to
Chinese economic and mili-
tary expansion. He held two
days of talks with Southeast
Asian leaders in Bangkok,
Thailand, and, joined by new
U.S. Secretary of Defense
Mark Esper, another round
with Australia’s government
in Sydney.
The complexity of Pom-
peo’s mission was evident
early on. He seemed to pull
his punches, publicly at
least, in criticizing China
during the annual confer-
ence of the Assn. of South-
east Asian Nations, in
Bangkok — where his Chi-
nese counterpart, Wang Yi,


was also in attendance.
Many of the countries have
robust ties with China.
In Sydney, Australian of-
ficials said they were giving
serious consideration to the
U.S. request, but they point-
edly said no decision had
been made.
That hesitancy reflected
Australian concern that
an overly close active mili-
tary relationship with the
U.S. could alienate a largely
pacifist domestic public
and disgruntle allies like
China.
It was also another sign

of the difficulties the Trump
administration is having in
marshaling international
forces against Iran ever
since President Trump
walked away from a nuclear
containment agreement
with Tehran that continues
to be supported by Europe,
Russia, China and the
United Nations.
France, Germany and
Japan have all said they will
not dispatch warships to
join the U.S. effort in the
Strait of Hormuz, a vital
waterway for transport of
Middle Eastern crude to the
West and parts of Asia, and
where tensions have soared
after a series of explosions
on tankers that the U.S.
blamed on Iran. The Islamic
Republic denied involve-
ment in those attacks, but
did claim to have shot down
a U.S. drone it said violated
its airspace.
Pompeo bristled when a
reporter suggested the re-
sponse to the U.S. request
has been lukewarm, cau-
tioning against believing
“everything that’s reported
in the press.”
“I am very confident that

we will have a global coali-
tion that ... reduces the risk
of conflict in the region and
enables the freedom of navi-
gation,” Pompeo said at a
brief news conference in
Sydney on Sunday. “There’s
lots of conversations tak-
ing place amongst the na-
tions.”
Standing alongside Pom-
peo and Esper, Australian
Defense Minister Linda
Reynolds said the Ameri-
cans’ “complex” request for
Australian participation in
escorting ships in the strait
would be given “very serious
consideration,” but she
would not endorse it.
“We are deeply concerned
by the heightened tensions
in the region. And we
strongly condemn the at-
tacks on shipping in the Gulf
of Oman,” she said. “But we
will ultimately, as we always
do, decide what is in our own
sovereign interests.”
It was a different story in
Micronesia. Here in Pohn-
pei, Pompeo could not have
asked for more effusive sup-
port. His criticism of China
was the strongest it had
been during the entire trip,

as were the reassurances he
received.
“Your small islands are
big strongholds of freedom,”
Pompeo said. Referring to
China, he added: “We will op-
pose any larger nation’s at-
tempts to turn the Pacific is-
lands into footholds for re-
gional dominance.”
David Panuelo, president
of the Federated States of
Micronesia, said, “Our rela-
tionship with the United
States is first and foremost,”
asserting that dealings with
China were “purely econo-
mic and technical co-
operation. I want to make
that clear.”
He was echoed by Mar-
shall Islands President
Hilda Heine and the vice
president of Palau, Raynold
Oilouch, who joined the
meetings in Palikir. The
three tiny nations have a
long history with the United
States, which administered
the islands after World War
II until 1986 when they
gained independence.
The Compact of Free As-
sociation continues to gov-
ern the U.S. relationship
with the islands, including

$100 million in aid annually,
water rights conventions
and other cooperation. Mar-
shall Islands was the site of
dozens of nuclear tests con-
ducted during the Cold War,
and radiation continues to
plague the Bikini Atoll.
One of Pompeo’s activ-
ities here was laying a
wreath at a memorial for Mi-
cronesian citizens killed
fighting with U.S. forces in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
“U.S. commitment to this
region is truly unparalleled,”
Pompeo said.
Underscoring the point,
the U.S. just this month ap-
pointed its first communica-
tions officer to its embassy
here, and Pompeo an-
nounced plans to negotiate
parts of the compact that
were expiring.
Pompeo, his wife, Susan,
who traveled with him, and
his entourage were greeted
by dozens of “chanters” in
traditional dress who
danced and sang greetings
and bestowed each of the
Americans with a mwar
mwar, a local version of a flo-
ral lei.
His motorcade drove
over hilly, narrow roadways
lined by thick, lush tropical
forest, palm trees, banana
plants and thatched roof
huts. Mist hung low over
parts of the canopy, inter-
rupted for a time by what
is described here as daily
rain.
Micronesian officials
have long complained of
degradation from climate
change, as rising sea levels
erode coastlines, threaten
the lifeline industry of fish-
ing, contaminate drinking
water with salty ocean water
and trigger ever fiercer
storms.
Pompeo was less forceful
in expressing concern for the
climate change that Micro-
nesians say is eating away
their coasts. Yet when
asked, he did acknowledge
the serious problem, some-
thing that the administra-
tion has been less willing to
do.
Trump has described cli-
mate change as a hoax, dis-
puted basic science on the
role human activity contrib-
utes and withdrew the
United States from the land-
mark Paris climate accord,
making the United States
one of only a handful of coun-
tries that are not participa-
ting.

Micronesia reaffirms its support for U.S.


SECRETARYof State Michael R. Pompeo meets U.S. Embassy staff members at the Pohnpei airport in Mi-
cronesia on the last stop of his three-nation tour aimed at reasserting American influence in the region.

Jonathan ErnstPool Photo

Tropical island nation


says it will stay on


America’s side in the


China standoff.


By Tracy Wilkinson


‘We will oppose


any larger nation’s


attempts to turn


the Pacific islands


into footholds


for regional


dominance.’


— Michael R.
Pompeo,
U.S. secretary of State

NEW DELHI — Tension
built for 10 days in a Himala-
yan valley that is as scenic as
it is turbulent.
In rugged Kashmir, India
sent in thousands more
troops without an official ex-
planation. Authorities can-
celed a famed Hindu pil-
grimage. Police trolled lakes
and guesthouses to evacu-
ate tourists. Schools were
closed, phone and internet
connections shut down, and
residents sheltered in their
homes.
Then, on Monday, with
most Kashmiris unable to
follow the news, the Indian
government announced a
historic constitutional
change, revoking the limited
autonomy held for decades
by its only Muslim-majority
territory.
The move to withdraw
Kashmir’s special legal stat-
us fulfills a long-standing
goal of Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s Hindu na-
tionalist party to yoke the
disputed northern territory
more closely to the rest of In-
dia.
It also appears certain to
heighten tensions with rival
Pakistan — which also
claims Kashmir — and trig-
ger a violent backlash
among separatist insur-
gents and civilians bitterly
opposed to Indian rule.
“Today marks the dark-
est day in Indian democ-
racy,” Kashmiri political


leader Mehbooba Mufti
tweeted, calling the change
“illegal and unconstitu-
tional.”
Modi’s top lieutenant,
Home Minister Amit Shah,
announced the presidential
decree in Parliament, draw-
ing angry outbursts from op-
position members who ar-
gued the move violated the
constitution and denied
Kashmiris the right to self-
determination promised to
them for more than 70 years.
The decree, once ap-
proved by a legislature
dominated by members of
Modi’s party, will cancel Ar-
ticle 370 of the Indian Consti-
tution, which grants the ter-
ritory the right to its own
constitution and bars out-
siders from buying land,
holding government jobs
and receiving educational
scholarships.
Removing those restric-
tions could pave the way for

Hindu settlers to move into
the area — a rugged land-
scape of snow-frosted
mountains and rippling ap-
ple orchards — to dilute the
Muslim population. Critics
drew comparisons to Israel’s
promotion of Jewish settle-
ment in Palestinian terri-
tories.
“This latest move is only
an attempt by the Indian
state to try and change the
demography of Kashmir
such that it ceases being a
conflict,” said Mudasir
Amin, a Kashmir-based re-
searcher.
The special protections
date to the earliest days of
India’s independence in 1947,
when the new nation sought
to bring the territory under
New Delhi’s authority. Paki-
stan, which rules another
portion of Kashmir, has
gone to war with India twice
over the region in the last
seven decades.

Pakistan’s government
said it “strongly condemns”
India’s effort to change
Kashmir’s status unilater-
ally, arguing that the bilat-
eral dispute was a matter for
the United Nations Security
Council. In India, the legality
of the presidential order was
not immediately clear, and
challenges to the move will
almost certainly go to the
country’s Supreme Court.
For supporters of Modi,
who won a sweeping reelec-
tion victory in May but has
been buffeted in recent
weeks by reports of a slowing
economy, the announce-
ment sparked jubilation.
“What a glorious day,” the
national general secretary of
Modi’s Bharatiya Janata
Party, Ram Madhav,
tweeted. In the hours after
the announcement, #Kash-
mirHamaraHai, or “Kash-
mir Is Ours,” trended on In-
dian social media.

As part of the announce-
ment, India said it was reor-
ganizing the state known as
Jammu and Kashmir, an
85,000-square-mile territory
bordered by Pakistan to the
west and China to the east.
The state includes the dis-
puted, 6,100-square-mile
Kashmir Valley, home to 5.
million people.
Under the reorganiza-
tion, the state would be
downgraded to a union terri-
tory, giving New Delhi far
greater control over its af-
fairs, including authority
over the local police.
The largest part of the
state, the sparsely popu-
lated region of Ladakh,
would be carved into a sepa-
rate union territory, a move
likely to be welcomed by the
area’s residents, most of
whom are Hindu or Bud-
dhist.
Indian-ruled Kashmir
had been on edge for days,
starting when New Delhi
sent thousands of additional
paramilitary troops to the
Kashmir Valley — already
one of the most heavily mili-
tarized zones in the world —
without any formal explana-
tion.
Local authorities then
abruptly canceled the annu-
al Amarnath Yatra, a Hindu
pilgrimage to a remote cave
in the Himalayan foothills,
and ordered non-Kashmiris
and tourists to leave im-
mediately because of “the
prevailing security situation
in the Kashmir Valley.”
The unusual move fueled
speculation that the govern-
ment was about to an-
nounce a decision on the
state’s special status. Many
of Kashmir’s residents
stocked up on supplies and
medicines.
On midnight Monday,
the communications lock-
down went into effect and lo-

cal authorities passed or-
ders restricting people’s
movement. Two former chief
ministers of the state —
Mufti and Omar Abdullah —
as well as politician Sajjad
Lone were placed under
house arrest.
Tariq Ahmad, who leads
houseboat tours on Dal
Lake in the main city of Sri-
nagar, said police officers
approached him Friday
morning and asked his Indi-
an guests to leave immedi-
ately.
“It was an absolute
panic,” Ahmad said. “Never
in the years of turmoil in
Kashmir have tourists been
forcibly evicted like this.”
Hours later, after the an-
nouncement in Parliament,
it remained unclear whether
many Kashmiris had
learned of the decision. Ex-
perts expected large public
protests despite the security
presence, and said Pakistan
could foment further vi-
olence by firing artillery
shells across the border and
supporting attacks by mili-
tants.
“Within the Kashmir Val-
ley, there will be opposition
leading to heightened and
prolonged unrest, including
increased activities of the
terrorist groups,” said
Sameer Patil, a security ana-
lyst with Gateway House, an
Indian think tank.
The U.S. Embassy in New
Delhi said U.S. citizens in the
state “are strongly advised
to leave as soon as possible
and to exercise great cau-
tion until they depart.”

Special correspondent
Iqbal reported from New
Delhi and Times staff writer
Bengali from Singapore.
Special correspondent
Aoun Sahi in Islamabad,
Pakistan, contributed to
this report.

India revokes Kashmir’s decades-long autonomy


INDIAN SOLDIERS stand guard in Srinagar, the summer capital of Jammu and
Kashmir state. India recently sent thousands of additional troops to the region.

Dar YasinAssociated Press

Large protests are


expected in the


disputed territory.


Pakistan condemns


move by New Delhi.


By Shashank Bengali
and Zaffar Iqbal

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