Trump makes Pearl Harbor stop en route to Asia

US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump throw flowers during their visit to the USS Arizona Memorial on November 3, 2017, at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Admiral Harry B. Harris, Jr. (L), Commander, US Pacific Command, and his wife Bruni Bradley accompanied theTrumps. / AFP PHOTO / JIM WATSON

 

HONOLULU, United States (AFP) — US President Donald Trump paid a somber visit to Pearl Harbor ahead of his first official trip to Asia, also meeting with military officials overseeing US operations in the Pacific region.

Trump and his wife Melania tossed white pikake flower petals into the waters at the USS Arizona memorial, where hundreds of US service members died when Japan launched a surprise attack in 1941, triggering the US entry into World War II.

The Trumps also took part in a wreath-laying ceremony during the stopover on Friday, watching as two sailors placed the flower arrangement before a white marble wall bearing the names of the fallen.

Before his some 20-minute visit to the shrine, Trump met with leaders of the US Pacific Command, amid growing concerns over security in the region.

In brief comments to reporters, Trump said it was “very special being in Hawaii.”

He voiced enthusiasm over his trip to Pearl Harbor, “which I’ve read about, spoken about, heard about, studied, but I haven’t seen.

“And that is going to be very exciting for me.”

Trump stopped in Hawaii ahead of a tour of Asia lasting nearly two weeks which will include visits to Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippines.

He left Washington with heavy domestic baggage — including new developments in the high-stakes probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 election — that risks dogging efforts at top-level diplomacy.

The trip itself poses its own set of challenges, with efforts to contain or roll back North Korea’s ballistic and nuclear missile programs topping the diplomatic agenda.

© Agence France-Presse