Trump leaves behind tax plan fight for the longest presidential trip to Asia in decades

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Trump leaves behind tax plan fight for the longest presidential trip to Asia in decades

trump air force one

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

President Donald Trump is headed to Asia for 11 days.

President Donald Trump will travel to Hawaii's Pearl Harbor on Friday before kicking off the longest presidential trip to Asia since George H.W. Bush vomited and fainted at a dinner with Japan's prime minister in 1992.

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Trump leaves behind a wake of indictments and criminal charges against his campaign officials and advisers, as part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russia's 2016 election meddling, and a fight in Congress over his proposed tax cuts.

In Asia, Trump will address security and trade concerns in Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

Between the US, South Korea, and Japan, the North Korean missile threat looms large and Trump is expected to reaffirm the US's commitment to the countries' alliance, though he has in the past questioned if the Asian allies pay their fair shares.

With China, the emerging world power that Trump accused of currency manipulation and "killing us" with a trade deficit, the US appears to actually have made progress. China now cooperates with the US on containing and limiting trade with North Korea like never before.

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China apparently dropped its opposition to the deployment of THAAD missile defense batteries to South Korea and normalized relations in a "reversal of an ineffective and costly policy on the part of China," Shi Yinhong, professor of international relations at Renmin University of China, told the New York Times.

Additionally, China's concessions come at a time where Trump has the US Navy routinely challenging Beijing's excessive maritime claims in the South China Sea, something that routinely angers China.

Importantly, Trump's visit to China comes as its president, Xi Jinping, consolidates power to a level never seen since Chairman Mao's decades-long rule. In Japan, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe just won an election and reaffirmed his mandate to rule the island nation as assertively as has been done since World War II.

Trump Xi

Reuters/Carlos Barria

President Donald Trump welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping at Mar-a-Lago state in Palm Beach, Florida.

In the Philippines, Trump will meet the popular populist Rodrigo Duterte, who looks to wrap up a violent drug war that's killed thousand and crush an Islamist insurgency in Marawi.

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Duterte has at times been hostile towards the US, and the Philippines, a US ally, can be seen as a bell-weather in the shifting power dynamic in Asia. In March of this year, Duterte lamented that despite US support, he couldn't do anything to stop China from building islands and militarizing the seas just outside of the Philippines.

"What do you want me to do? Declare war against China? I can't. We will lose all our military and policemen tomorrow and we (will be) a destroyed nation," Duterte said at the time. Trump may potentially try to reassure Duterte, whose country holds massive US military bases in the Pacific.

Art of the deal?

trump business leaders meeting

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

U.S. President Donald Trump hosts a meeting with business leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington January 23, 2017. From left are Corning CEO Wendell Weeks, Trump, Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex Gorsky and Dell CEO Michael Dell.

On trade, Trump's accompanying business envoy will include mainly energy firms instead of tech or financial companies - possibly playing to a US strength, and possibly covering up a tech industry that's unenthusiastic about the current administration.

Tech companies face an uphill battle in China, where the US maintains that the government favors domestic firms and can force foreign tech firms to give up intellectual property only to find those trade secrets leaked to Chinese firms. On the finance side, some companies allege off the record that Beijing informs domestic banks of important banking decisions before foreign firms.

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Trump's rocky relationship with US industry leaders may also contribute to the makeup of his business envoy, with an unnamed member of the business community telling Reuters, "very few want to stick their heads up and be perceived as complaining directly," about China's treatment of foreign companies, "and even fewer trust this White House to do anything helpful on their issues."

But the US remains competitive in energy prices and Trump's chief diplomat and former head of energy giant Exxon, Rex Tillerson, will accompany him on the trip.

Penning a deal to sell off some of the US's glut of natural gas to Asian partners could be a possible trade victory for Trump in Asia.

But with Trump a full 12 hours ahead of the US in China, and similarly removed from the US time zone, expect quieter days where Trump news comes after events take place, instead of as a live show.