Clinton expected to visit Indonesia this month
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 02/03/2009 9:16 PM
Hillary Clinton is expected to visit Indonesia next month as part of her maiden trip as U.S. secretary of state, diplomats said.
According to Reuters, the diplomats said Clinton's visit to Indonesia, the
world's most populous Muslim nation, during her Asia trip would fit with President Obama's efforts to restore U.S. relations with the Muslim world.
Obama, who spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, said
in his inaugural address he sought a new way forward with the
Muslim world "based on mutual interest and mutual respect."
The diplomats, who spoke on condition they not be
identified because the State Department has yet to announce the
trip, cautioned that Clinton's schedule could change, but mentioned that China, Japan and South Korea were also on Clinton's travel agenda.
The stalled multilateral effort to rein in North Korea's
nuclear ambitions is likely to be a major feature of Clinton's
talks in the region, as is the global financial crisis.
North Korea's nuclear program is among the most vexing of a
series of foreign policy challenges that U.S. President Barack
Obama inherited from former President George W. Bush.
Pyongyang agreed in 2005 to abandon its nuclear programs
under a deal struck by the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and
the United States but it then tested a nuclear device in 2006.
The secretive, communist state subsequently reached more
detailed pacts to dismantle its plutonium-based nuclear program
but it has balked at allowing extensive inspections that would
allow the United States to verify its actions.
Clinton has praised the six-party talks, which allow the United States to try to leverage the influence of the other
parties -- notably China -- to reward North Korea for steps
toward denuclearization and to punish it for backsliding.
However, it is unclear how the Obama administration plans
to get North Korea back on track with the aid-for-disarmament
deal or whether it may consider a more intense bilateral
dialogue as a way to do so.