National Post

Trump and Kim are no Nixon and Mao

- ELI LAKE

If you Google “Trump,” “Nixon” and “China,” you will find billions of pixels devoted to comparing the 37th president’s breakthrou­gh with Beijing to the potential summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un.

The parallel is understand­able. It took a committed anti-communist to open relations with Communist China. Perhaps it will take a president who threatened “fire and fury” to establish ties to the leader he called “little rocket man.”

In 1972 when Mao Zedong hosted president Richard Nixon in Beijing, Communist China suffered severe internatio­nal isolation in much the way North Korea does today. Like Mao, Kim espouses a harsh collectivi­sm that imposes misery, famine and death on his people.

All of that said, Trump’s willingnes­s to meet with North Korea’s dictator is not really comparable to the opening of relations between the U.S. and China. The latter was far more important strategica­lly and economical­ly for both countries.

What’s more, the geopolitic­al conditions that drove China to go to Nixon were entirely different from those today for the grandson of the “Great Leader” in Pyongyang.

Let’s start with China. By 1972, Mao’s China had a rocky relationsh­ip with the Soviet Union. Three years earlier, the two powers almost went to war over a dispute about the Zhenbao Island and the Ussuri River on their borders. Former U.S. State Department analyst Helmut Sonnenfeld­t told the Associatio­n for Diplomatic Studies & Training in a 2000 interview that he believed a U.S.-China thaw “could be of some help in getting the Soviets to play ball on some issues that we were interested in.”

That feeling was mutual. Mao’s China also believed that co-operating with the U.S. in limited areas would be a useful balance for its relationsh­ip with the Soviets. As Sonnenfeld­t explained, eventually the U.S. was able to get sophistica­ted technical equipment into China to monitor Soviet compliance with a nuclear test ban treaty.

Kim is facing a very different set of problems today. To start, he presides over a weak country that relies almost exclusivel­y on China for the power and trade that allows his regime to survive. China’s relationsh­ip with the Soviet Union during the Nixon years was one of two rival great powers, not the client-state relationsh­ip that North Korea has with China. Where Mao was motivated by an opportunit­y to co-operate against a common adversary by turning a foe to a friend, no such opportunit­y exists for Kim.

It’s hard to distil Kim’s motivation­s for these gestures toward U.S. talks, because North Korea is after all the Hermit Kingdom — with no free media and an opaque regime. But there are two leading theories. The first is that Kim is motivated by fear, the second that he is motivated by confidence.

Michael Auslin, a scholar on contempora­ry Asia at the Hoover Institutio­n, puts it like this: “One theory is that Kim is rattled and scared by the unknown quantity of Trump, and he doesn’t know how far will he go.” This view is bolstered after the implementa­tion of the U.S.led “maximum pressure” campaign that has targeted North Korea’s hard currency reserves.

Auslin says the second big theory of Kim’s motivation is all about the nuclear weapons Trump is trying to get Kim to relinquish. “Now that Kim has shown he has a ballistic missile and a nuclear capability, he feels he can negotiate from a position of strength,” Auslin told me.

As Trump once said, Kim will keep us in suspense. In the meantime it’s important to understand what the potential summit is and is not. It may present a chance to remove the threat of nuclear missiles aimed at American cities. That’s always a worthy goal.

But there is no chance this summitry will unshackle a great power the way Nixon’s fateful trip to China did in 1972. China remains authoritar­ian and a danger to its neighbours. But the opening and normalizat­ion that began nearly 50 years ago has modernized its economy and lifted hundreds of millions of people out of subsistenc­e poverty. Today China, whether we like it or not, plays an important role in world affairs.

Nothing like that is in the cards for North Korea. After a Trump-Kim summit, North Korea will remain a weak client state. Short of a revolution, its regime will remain a moral stain. And its people will continue to suffer.

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