Pence did not mention the attack in his address to 184 chiefs of US diplomatic missions who gather annually in Washington from around the world to discuss foreign policy strategy.
“The caliphate has crumbled and ISIS has been defeated,” Pence told the US ambassadors and other senior American diplomats, referring to Islamic State.
Four US personnel killed in Syria suicide attack
In separate statements later, both the White House and Pence condemned the attack and expressed sympathy for the deaths of the US personnel.
The Pentagon said two US servicemembers, a Department of Defence civilian employee and one contractor working for the military were killed and three servicemembers were injured in the blast in the northern Syria town of Manbij.
An Islamic State-affiliated website said the attack was the work of a suicide bomber.
Trump made a surprise announcement on Dec 19 that he would withdraw 2,000 US troops from Syria after concluding that Islamic State had been defeated there. His decision led to the resignation of US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, who cited policy differences with the president for his departure.
LACK OF PROGRESS
Despite talks of a second leaders’ summit between Trump and North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un, Pence acknowledged that efforts to convince Pyonyang to give up its nuclear arsenal had not made headway.
“While the president is promising dialogue with Chairman Kim we still await concrete steps by North Korea to dismantle the nuclear weapons that threaten our people and our allies in the region,” he said.
The vice president also criticised China’s “unfair” trade practices and loans to developing countries that pushed up their debt levels as it tries to gain greater influence in the world.
“The truth is that too often in recent years China has chosen a path that disregards the laws and norms that have kept the world state prosperous for more than half a century,” he said. “The days of the United States looking the other way are over,” he added.
China-N Korea trade battered by UN sanctions
Pence said the administration’s foreign policy was based on Trump’s “America First” agenda. “No longer will the United States government pursue grandiose, unrealistic notions at the expense of American people,” he said.
He acknowledged that Trump’s foreign policy was “different from what the world has come to expect” and that the United States faced different threats than during the Cold War.
“Today we are not up against one super power but several great powers competing with us for preeminence across the world,” he said, saying the United States faced a “wolf pack” of rogue states including Iran, Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.
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