National Post (National Edition)

Guess who screwed up North Korea summit?

- Gary C. Gambill Gary C. Gambill is a Philadelph­ia-based policy analyst.

In the wake of last week’s collapse of a planned June 12 summit between President Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un (which now may be back on), commentato­rs rushed to point the finger at National Security Adviser John Bolton. Bolton “seems to have played a key role in the cancellati­on” wrote New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. “John Bolton must be stoked,” tweeted Sen. Brian Schatz (D-hawaii). “John Bolton’s Wrecking Ball Takes Down North Korea Summit” reads the headline of Ankit Panda’s Daily Beast op-ed. F.H. Buckley calls for him to be fired.

In fact, Bolton was barely involved. It was a pair of jawdroppin­g televised gaffes by the president and vice-president that sent the Trumpkim lovefest into a downward spiral.

The saga began on April 29, when Bolton was asked on CBS’S Face the Nation about the administra­tion’s expectatio­n that Kim Jong Un demonstrat­e upfront his willingnes­s to give up nuclear weapons. “I think we’re looking at the Libya model of 2003, 2004,” Bolton replied, referring to Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi’s abrupt decision to verifiably abandon all of his weapons of mass destructio­n and associated infrastruc­ture, which helped rapidly bring him back into the good graces of the West after years of pariahdom stemming from Libya’s orchestrat­ion of the December 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.

“What we want to see from them is evidence that it’s real and not just rhetoric,” Bolton explained, adding that “one thing that Libya did that led us to overcome our skepticism was that they allowed American and British observers into all their nuclear related sites … it wasn’t a question of relying on internatio­nal mechanisms.” As a result, said Bolton, “we saw them in ways we had never seen before.”

Bolton’s reference to the Libya model (not the first since his appointmen­t weeks earlier) was perfectly clear to anyone with a passing familiarit­y with disarmamen­t issues, and to the North Koreans, who ignored it until pre-summit negotiatio­ns grew acrimoniou­s in midmay. In a May 16 statement, North Korea rejected the Libya model of “abandoning nuclear weapons first, compensati­ng afterward,” adding that “it is absolutely absurd to dare compare the DPRK (North Korea), a nuclear weapon state, to Libya, which had been at the initial stage of nuclear developmen­t.”

However, Bolton’s point was not perfectly clear to President Trump, who was asked to comment on North Korea’s complaints about the “Libyan model” the next day in an exchange with reporters at the White House. Evidently ignorant of Libya’s WMD disarmamen­t 15 years ago (a relatively minor news story even then), Trump assumed Bolton was talking about Gadhafi’s overthrow by a U.s.-led coalition during the 2011 Arab Spring. “The Libya model isn’t the model that we have at all when we’re thinking of North Korea,” he replied, adding, “If you look at that model with Gadhafi, that was a total decimation. We went in there to beat him. Now, that model will take place if we don’t make a deal, most likely.”

That Trump, who had been gushing with praise for North Korea since welcoming home three American prisoners a week earlier, suddenly found himself threatenin­g to “decimate” North Korea because of his misunderst­anding of Bolton’s “Libya model” was bad enough. No one in the administra­tion corrected the mistake. Indeed, the mistake became the new truth inside the White House.

In a May 21 interview with Fox News, Pence brought up the Libya model unprompted and closely parroted both Trump’s misinterpr­etation of Bolton and his threat of regime change: “You know, there was some talk about the Libya model last week. And you know, as the president made clear, you know, this will only end like the Libya model ended if Kim Jong-un doesn’t make a deal.”

Hours later, North Korean Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Choe Son Hui denounced the “ignorant and stupid remarks gushing out from the mouth of the U.S. vice-president” and threatened to “put forward a suggestion to our supreme leadership for reconsider­ing the DPRK-U.S. summit.” This insult led Trump to announce cancellati­on of the summit on Thursday.

This week, Trump is full of obsequious praise for the North Korean dictator as his administra­tion reportedly scrambles to revive the June 12 summit. In light of the president’s resistance to sitting through detailed briefings on North Korea and the fact that he still “doesn’t think he needs to” prepare for the summit, according to a senior White House official quoted by Time, let’s hope it stays cancelled.

BOLTON’S REFERENCE TOTHELIBYA MODEL ... WAS PERFECTLY CLEAR.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? National security adviser John Bolton and his wife Gretchen arrive before President Donald Trump speaks at Arlington National Cemetery on Monday. Bolton has been incorrectl­y blamed for the cancellati­on of the U.s.-north Korea summit, Gary C. Gambill...
ALEX BRANDON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National security adviser John Bolton and his wife Gretchen arrive before President Donald Trump speaks at Arlington National Cemetery on Monday. Bolton has been incorrectl­y blamed for the cancellati­on of the U.s.-north Korea summit, Gary C. Gambill...

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