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White House says Trump nuclear policy 'catastrophic'
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 31, 2016


The White House on Thursday lambasted Donald Trump's suggestion that Asian allies should develop nuclear weapons, saying it would shatter doctrine held for decades, with "catastrophic" consequences.

Following the Republican frontrunner's declaration that, as president, he would withdraw troops from South Korea and Japan and allow those two countries to develop nukes, Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes offered a scathing rebuke.

"The entire premise of American foreign policy as it relates to nuclear weapons for the last 70 years has been focused on preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons," said Rhodes, one of President Barack Obama's closest aides.

"That has been the position of bipartisan administrations, of everybody who has occupied the Oval Office."

"It would be catastrophic for the United States to shift its position and indicate that we somehow support the proliferation of nuclear weapons."

The remarks -- coming during a top-level nuclear security summit in Washington -- is yet another sign of how much Trump's rhetoric on the campaign trail is bleeding into America's relations with the rest of the world.

Once dismissed out of hand, Trump's strong showing in the polls has forced diplomats to take his positions increasingly seriously as he gets within striking distance of the Republican presidential nomination.

President Barack Obama has admitted that foreign leaders often ask about the shrill tone of the 2016 campaign to replace him.

Rhodes insisted that the US treaty obligations to defend Japan and South Korea was "rock solid."

The agreements, forged from the embers of the Korean War, have defined East Asian geopolitics for generations, projecting US power across the Pacific.

There are nearly 30,000 US troops permanently stationed in South Korea and 47,000 in Japan, with little appetite for nuclear weapons in either nation.

Japan is widely seen as having the know-how to produce nuclear arms but, as the only country to have suffered an atomic attack, public opinion is strongly opposed to such a move.


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