Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman visits Pacific Command
Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Hawaii Thursday to meet with U.S. Pacific Command leadership on the first leg of his second Asia trip in three months.
The Japan Times reported Dunford will visit Japan, China and South Korea to discuss, among other topics, North Korea’s nuclear program.
This is the second stop in Hawaii by Dunford since June.
#GenDunford arrives in Hawaii greeted by @PacificMarines Lt. Gen. Berger on first leg of #AsiaPacific trip. @DeptofDefense @PacificCommand pic.twitter.com/l3YEYEr7DS
— The Joint Staff (@thejointstaff) August 11, 2017
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Dunford visited Japan, Singapore and Australia on an earlier trip that started May 31. He stopped at Wake Island and then Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam on June 7 on his way back to Washington D.C.
After North Korea’s second apparently successful intercontinental ballistic missiles test launch July 28, Dunford and Adm. Harry Harris, head of U.S. Pacific Command on Oahu, met at the Pentagon and phoned the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Gen. Lee Sun Jin. “During the call Dunford and Harris expressed the ironclad commitment to the U.S.-Republic of Korea alliance. The three leaders also discussed military response options,” a spokesman said on the Joint Chiefs website.