stunning
upset over Hillary Clinton to become the 45th president of the United
States. His triumph holds the potential for overturning international
relations. Criticisms of trade and immigration were central to his
candidacy; Mr. Trump has professed admiration for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia and once called climate change a Chinese hoax; he has criticized
the American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; and he has demanded that
the nation’s allies foot more of the bill for their defense. (Follow
our Politics briefing for the latest
from the election.) “While we will always put America’s interests first,
we will deal fairly with everyone,” Mr. Trump said in his victory
speech.
In Japan, Anxiety From an Ally
As
recently as late last week, government officials told Japanese
journalists that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would visit Washington to
meet with Hillary Clinton in February.
On
the campaign trail, Mr. Trump unnerved Japanese leaders as he
frequently excoriated American allies and singled out Japan. He claimed
that Tokyo was not paying its fair share to support United States
military bases, calling into question the American commitment to defend
Japan in case of attack.
Analysts
in Japan said that even if Mrs. Clinton was not necessarily popular,
she was predictable, a valued trait at a time when Asia is roiled by
tensions with North Korea and territorial disputes between China and
Japan. “Mr. Trump is a loose cannon and nobody really knows what to
expect from him,” said Jeffrey Kingston, the director of Asian Studies
at Temple University in Tokyo. “And that is always unsettling in a
region that is marked by a number of tensions.”
The most immediate beneficiary of a Trump presidency, according to Mr. Kingston, would be China.
Although
worried by Mr. Trump’s complete lack of foreign policy experience,
analysts said his campaign rhetoric would inevitably be tempered by
experience in the Oval Office, as well as by the advice of experts. It
would not be so easy, for example, to withdraw completely from security
alliances.
“We
have to wait to see whether he will get good briefings or whether he is
flexible enough to look at things more squarely,” said Yoshiki Mine, a
former official with the Foreign Ministry in Japan and now head of the
Institute for Peaceful Diplomacy, a research group.
A
rising China could also put a check on Mr. Trump’s stated ambitions in
Asia. “Maybe he will decrease the commitment to Pacific security
issues,” said Shin Kawashima, professor of international relations at
the University of Tokyo. “But if he carries out such a policy, China
will be much more authoritative and aggressive in the Pacific. And then
most of the alliance countries and security experts in Washington will
be against Trump’s policies. It is a little difficult for Trump to just
change all the old policies.”
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe tried to calm the country, as the yen surged and
stocks stumbled. “Hand in hand with Trump, we will try to work
together,” he said.
Mr. Abe’s administration has embraced the security alliance with the United States while slowly building up its own military capabilities
and strengthening ties with Russia. Mr. Trump’s talk of disengaging
from the region could embolden Mr. Abe’s efforts to develop a more
independent foreign policy.
— MOTOKO RICH and HISAKO UENO
— MOTOKO RICH and HISAKO UENO
South Korea Warns the North Not to ‘Misjudge’
Jeong
Joon-hee, a government spokesman in South Korea, said on Wednesday his
country remained unshakable in its belief that it should maintain a
strong military alliance with the United States, no matter who became
president.
“North
Korea should not misjudge the solidity of our alliance with the United
States and our joint ability to respond” to provocations, Mr. Jeong
said.
South
Korea, he said, remained vigilant in case North Korea should attempt a
provocation to raise tensions on the Korean Peninsula while Washington
was absorbed in its domestic political drama.
President Park Geun-hye’s government remains mired in a political scandal at home that has led to calls for her to step down.
Moon
Jae-in, an opposition leader and a contender for the presidency in next
year’s election, reconfirmed his commitment to the alliance with the
United States “no matter who becomes president there.”
Mr.
Trump unsettled South Koreans when he said that he might withdraw
American troops there unless Seoul paid more for their presence. He also
indicated that he might let Japan and South Korea protect themselves
with nuclear weapons, and that he might negotiate directly with the
North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un.
Mr.
Trump’s surprisingly strong performance caught analysts off guard, but
it was welcome news for those in South Korea who believe that their
country must build its own nuclear weapons to defend against North
Korea.
Mr.
Trump’s election would “open the way for South Korea to go nuclear in
an agreement with the United States,” said Cheong Seong-chang, a senior
analyst at the Sejong Institute in Seongnam, South Korea.
— CHOE SANG-HUN
— CHOE SANG-HUN
China Braces for a Tenser Relationship
Lu
Kang, a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said, “We hope
to strive together with the new U.S. administration to advance the
continued healthy and stable development of Sino-American relations, to
the benefit of the two countries and the world.”
Asked
about Chinese-American economic relations, Mr. Lu said that the growth
in trade and economic ties had been a boon to both countries. “It
certainly has brought benefits to the people of both,” he said. “As for
certain specific disputes in Sino-U.S. relations, both countries are
important members of the W.T.O. framework, and they already have an
existing mature framework and model for handling these problems. I’m
confident that China and the United States are two mature powers able to
properly handle these problems.”
Pressed
on Mr. Trump’s remarks that trade with China had devastated American
manufacturing, Mr. Lu said that “over the past few decades, Sino-U.S.
trade has benefited the people on both sides, including the American
people, and has increased employment, rather than the opposite.”
The
prospects of a Trump victory had been greeted with ambivalence in
China, which has grown more assertive at home and abroad during the
presidency of Xi Jinping. Chinese officials had worried about the
unpredictability of a Trump administration, and they were expecting a
more hawkish United States policy toward Beijing on issues like the
South China Sea if Mrs. Clinton was elected.
Su
Hao, a professor of international relations at the China Foreign
Affairs University in Beijing, said that the Chinese government was
probably ready for a Trump presidency. “There could be less conflicts
between United States and China,” he said. Mrs. Clinton backed President
Obama’s “pivot” toward Asia, while Mr. Trump criticized it. Beijing sees the pivot strategy as an attempt to contain China’s rising power.
But
Professor Su also said that “a decline of China-U.S. relations is
inevitable” under a Trump presidency, predicting: “More frictions on
trade would arise during his administration,” Professor Su he said. “But
in general, the Republicans have proved they are capable of maintaining
a stable relationship with China. We expect the tie could stay on
track.”
— YUFAN HUANG
— YUFAN HUANG
Malaysian Leader Lauds Trump’s Upset Victory
Prime Minister Najib Razak was one of the first leaders to offer effusive praise for Mr. Trump.
“The
world has watched this year’s presidential election with fascination,”
he said in a statement. “At almost every turn, media commentators have
been proven wrong and the results anticipated by experts have been
overturned. Donald Trump was considered a distant outsider when his
candidacy was first announced. He beat the establishment consensus by
winning the Republican nomination, and did so again with his remarkable
victory today. Mr. Trump’s success shows that politicians should never
take voters for granted.”
Mr. Najib, who has stared down corruption charges,
added: “His appeal to Americans who have been left behind — those who
want to see their government more focused on their interests and
welfare, and less embroiled in foreign interventions that proved to be
against U.S. interests — have won Mr. Trump the White House.”— SEWELL
CHAN
A Surprise for India, World’s Largest Democracy
“There
is a great deal of uncertainty injected into America’s position in the
world,” said Dhruva Jaishankar, a fellow at the Brookings Institution
India Center.
For
India, which has become accustomed to the United States’ assertion of
power in the Asia-Pacific region, a central question is whether
Washington will reduce its military presence.
“If
that is called into question, India will no longer be able to rely on
the U.S. to be there as a security provider,” he said. The result could
be a more assertive China, Korea, and Japan, he added.
“There are many variables at play,” he said. “It could be a lose-lose for everybody.”
He
added, however, that there were many unknowns in a Trump presidency,
even for seasoned observers of Washington. Ordinarily, “for both
Republicans and Democrats, we have some sense of who are the people
around him, who would be in the running for secretary of state and
treasury,” Mr. Jaishankar said. “With Trump, we have no idea.”
Mr.
Trump’s victory might also have an impact on the about 1.5 million
Indians living in the United States, who could feel the effect of
anti-immigration and xenophobic sentiment, he said.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, who formed a notably warm relationship with
President Obama, is a pragmatic leader who will have little difficulty
connecting with Mr. Trump, Mr. Jaishankar said.
In
a panel discussion broadcast on the NDTV news channel, Leela Ponappa, a
former deputy national security adviser, spoke about the uncertainty
across Asia. “Trump is going to add to those uncertainties,” she said.
“What happens to the Japanese alliance? What happens to the Korean
alliance?”
— ELLEN BARRY AND NIDA NAJAR
— ELLEN BARRY AND NIDA NAJAR
Iran Vows to Maintain Nuclear Agreement
The
head of Iran’s atomic energy program told the semiofficial Tasnim news
agency on Wednesday that the country would “try to continue to implement
the nuclear agreement,” regardless of the presidential outcome.
Mr.
Trump has called the January agreement between Iran and world powers
“the worst deal ever,” and he has vowed to unilaterally abandon it.
Under the agreement, Iran has given up large chunks of its nuclear program in exchange for some sanctions relief.
Tehran’s stock exchange went into a free fall on Wednesday, losing 1,300 points in one hour.
Iran’s
leaders have been expressing pleasure over the political upheaval in
the United States, deliberately showing the debates to illustrate “the
crisis America is in,” Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
said last week.
One
analyst, Farshad Ghorbanpour, who is close to the government of the
Iranian president, Hassan Rouhani, said he feared that the election of
Mr. Trump would have huge implications for Mr. Rouhani, who has been
promoting better relations with the United States.
“Our hard-liners will pressure him, they are very happy now,” he said.
Iranian
state television, always slow to come through with official reactions,
hosted several experts who often express the viewpoints of the country’s
leaders.
They
said the election of Mr. Trump was the result of an “awakening,” Iran’s
ideological label for some of the Arab Spring revolts.
Foad
Izadi, a professor of international relations at Tehran University,
said the awakening had started with the Occupy Wall Street protests and
had now spread out across the country. “Trump is riding a wave of
Americans longing for change,” he said.
— THOMAS ERDBRINK
— THOMAS ERDBRINK
Israel Follows the Race in Real Time
Israeli
television covered the results through the night as if it were a local
election — and in some ways it was, given that the United States is
Israel’s prime backer and most important ally.
Israeli
leaders asserted in recent days that the Israeli-American relationship
was strong and deep enough to transcend political vagaries, and the
government has studiously avoided taking sides. At the same time, Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted this week that Israel was tightening
its bilateral relations with Russia and India, and is in talks to
develop its economic ties with China.
By
morning, as a Trump victory seemed assured, Tzachi Hanegbi, a minister
from Mr. Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party, said on Israel’s Channel 2
television that whereas a Clinton win would have represented more of
the same, there were people around Mr. Trump whose instincts were
perhaps more “relevant to Israeli interests.”
Ron
Prosor, a former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, said a Trump
victory spelled “the end of political correctness” — long viewed by
Israel as a diplomatic bugbear in its dealings with the world over the
Palestinian issue. Mr. Prosor also seemed satisfied that there would be
“no free lunches” for Iran under a Trump presidency, and that Iran would
be called to account for any violations of the nuclear accord that the
Israeli government so vehemently opposed.
— ISABEL KERSHNER
— ISABEL KERSHNER
In Europe, the Far Right Rejoices
Two
far-right, anti-immigrant nationalist leaders, Geert Wilders in the
Netherlands and Marine Le Pen in France, cheered Mr. Trump’s victory.
“The Americans are taking their country back,” Mr. Wilders, a lawmaker who leads the Party for Freedom and who faces hate-speech charges, wrote on Twitter.
Ms. Le Pen, the leader of the National Front in France, and a candidate for the French presidency, wrote on Twitter: “Congratulations to the new president of the United States, Donald Trump, and to the American people — free!”
Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, one of the few European leaders who spoke favorably of Mr. Trump during the campaign, wrote on Facebook: “What a great news. Democracy is still alive.”— SEWELL CHAN
[Hawnsgist] SHOCK Sweeps The World As Donald Trump Wins US Elections
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November 09, 2016
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