The Phnom Penh Post

NK has great potential: Trump

- Brian Knowlton

US AND North Korean officials met on Sunday at a border truce village as preparatio­ns resumed for a high-stakes, high-drama summit that President Donald Trump suggests could help the North realise its “brilliant potential”.

“I truly believe North Korea has brilliant potential and will be a great economic and financial Nation one day,” Trump said on Twitter. “Kim Jong Un agrees with me on this. It will happen!” the president said, confirming that a US team “has arrived in North Korea to make arrangemen­ts for the summit” between himself and North Korean leader Kim.

His upbeat language contrasted sharply to that of only three days earlier, when Trump cancelled the planned summit, citing “open hostility” from the North. An extraordin­ary flurry of diplomacy since then – much of it led by South Korea – appears to have put the meeting back on track.

Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met on Saturday at the Panmunjom border truce village, in a surprise bid to salvage the June 12 summit planned for Singapore.

Announcing the lower-level talks held on Sunday, State Department­spokeswoma­nHeather Nauert said: “We continue to prepare for a meeting between the President and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.”

The Washington Post reported that the US delegation to the Panmunjom meeting – in the Demilitari­sed Zone between North and South Korea – was led by Sung Kim, a former US ambassador to South Korea and former nuclear negotiator with the North. It said the Americans met with North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Choe Son-hui.

Tokyo stocks opened higher on Monday on the news, although trading was thin.

“Excessive worries receded as efforts resumed for a summit between the US and North Korea,” Okasan Online Securities strategist Yoshihiro Ito said in a commentary, which added that uncertaint­y remains.

The United States currently has no ambassador to South Korea, even as it takes up one of the most delicate diplomatic challenges in years.

It remains far from clear how Trump and Kim might be able to bridge what appear to be vast difference­s in their expectatio­ns for what would be a historic meeting. But analysts on Sunday expressed increasing confidence that it will take place.

Days of brinkmansh­ip

The apparent progress in the on-again-off-again talks followed a tense and turbulent few days of diplomatic brinkmansh­ip. Within 24 hours of cancelling the summit Trump reversed course, saying it could still go ahead after productive talks were held with North Korean officials.

“It’s moving along very nicely,” Trump said at the White House on Saturday. “We’re looking at June 12 in Sing- apore. That hasn’t changed.”

His abrupt decision to pull out of the meeting had blindsided South Korea and Moon, who had been brokering a remarkable detente between Washington and Pyongyang in a bid to avoid a devastatin­g conflict.

But Trump accompanie­d the cancellati­on with a letter to Kim that mixed tough language with an almost beseeching plea to get things back on track. Some critics mocked the letter’s tone, but it may have achieved the desired result.

Kim ‘met his match’

James Clapper, director of US national intelligen­ce under former president Barack Obama, told CNN: “I support the letter that President Trump sent . . . In some ways, Kim Jong-un may have met his match here with our very unconventi­onal president.”

Victor Cha, who was President George W Bush’s top adviser on North Korea and was briefly expected to get Trump’s nod as ambassador to South Korea, said on Sunday he was now confident the summit will take place.

The Moon and Trump administra­tions very much want the meeting, he said, “and Kim says he wants a summit, so it’s going to happen”.

There are still stark difference­s between what the two sides hope to achieve.

Washington wants North Korea to quickly give up all its nuclear weapons in a verifiable way in return for sanctions and economic relief.

Pyongyang has a different view of denucleari­sation and remains deeply worried that abandoning its deterrent would leave the country – and its leader – vulnerable, especially while the United States maintains a robust military presence in South Korea.

Kim“has almost an emotional attachment and a personal psychologi­cal attachment to these nuclear weapons,” US Senator Marco Rubio said on Sunday on ABC’s This Week. “They make him feel prestigiou­s, they make him feel powerful.”

If Trump is unable to negotiate those weapons away and unwilling to live in a world where North Korea poses a nuclear threat, then “you’re going to have to do something to go after them at some point”, the senator said.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP ?? US President Donald Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in hold a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 22.
SAUL LOEB/AFP US President Donald Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in hold a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 22.

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