Australia: Admiral to Become US Ambassador to South Korea
Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of US forces in the Pacific, will become the next US ambassador to South Korea instead of Australia, the Australian foreign minister said today.
Canberra, Apr 25 (AP) Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of US forces in the Pacific, will become the next US ambassador to South Korea instead of Australia, the Australian foreign minister said today.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said she had been informed of the decision by Acting Secretary of State John Sullivan on yesterday.
"While we would have welcomed Adm. Harris here as ambassador to Australia, we understand that there are significant challenges for the United States on the Korean peninsula," Bishop told reporters in Sydney.
"We of course have a very strong and deep relationship with the United States and I am sure they will choose a very appropriate ambassador to take his place in due course," she added.
Bishop said Sullivan made it clear a new appointment would be a priority for the next secretary of state.
President Donald Trump nominated Harris in February to become Australia's next ambassador.
The United States had not had an ambassador in Australia since John Berry, president of the American Australian Association, left the post in September 2016.
Andrew Shearer, a former Australian government security adviser and now an adviser on Asia-Pacific security at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the change of ambassador plans made Australia appear to be a second-class ally of the United States.
"Australia really ... is ... a collateral casualty here to the shambolic practices of the Trump Administration," Shearer told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. "I don't think there's anything sinister to it. I think it's much more typical of the ad hoc, moment-to-moment decision making if this particular administration," he added.
Bishop noted past appointments for US ambassador to Australia took time. In the meantime, Charge d'Affaires Jim Caruso will continue to act in the role. Opposition defence spokesman Richard Marles said the sooner Australia got a new US ambassador the better.
"We're close friends, I don't think anyone is taking offence," Marles told Sky News television.
Former government minister and the current Australian War Memorial director Brendan Nelson said while he wouldn't describe it as a snub, the United States should have proper representation in Australia.
"I say to President Trump and those who are advising him: we need an ambassador, we deserve an ambassador and we'd like one soon," Nelson said. Former deputy prime minister and diplomat Tim Fischer said the delay in appointing an ambassador reflected its low priority in Washington.
"Nigh on two years will be an insult with impact, notwithstanding the good work of the acting ambassador in Canberra," Fischer said of the absence of an ambassador. (AP) IJT
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