National Post (National Edition)

‘WORLD WILL SEE A MAJOR CHANGE’

JOINT STATEMENT LEAVES MUCH TO BE DESIRED, BUT TRUMP HAS PIERCED KIM’S ISOLATION BUBBLE

- Victor cha

It was not an easy journey. We’ve had a past that stopped us from advancing, and wrong behaviours and practices sometimes closed our eyes and ears. North Korean leader Kim Jong UN

The past does not have to define the future. Yesterday’s conflict does not have to be tomorrow’s war. … adversarie­s can become friends. U.S. President Donald Trump

There is a phrase in Korean: “Begun is half-done.” It means when tackling a difficult task, half of the battle is getting started.

Despite the many warts in President Donald Trump’s unconventi­onal diplomacy toward North Korea, we have to give him credit.

Only five months ago, based on my conversati­ons with this administra­tion, I thought we were headed down an inexorable path toward a devastatin­g war.

A military attack would not have ended North Korea’s nuclear weapons program. Instead, it would have resulted in a war — with hundreds of thousands of deaths in Japan and South Korea, including thousands of Americans — that the United States would have won but with horrible costs.

Thanks to the creative Olympics diplomacy from President Moon Jae In of South Korea, which teased the North Koreans out of their selfimpose­d isolation, and Trump’s impulsive decision to meet with the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, the world witnessed a historic meeting on June 12 between two countries that have been sworn enemies for almost seven decades.

Kim arrived early for the meeting as a sign of respect for his counterpar­t, who is more than twice his age. Trump played the role of the elder host, gently guiding Kim to the meeting room, showing him his limousine and reporting to the media about the good-natured flavour of the meetings. Those personal touches in summit diplomacy can create unique opportunit­ies for trust-building that a normal diplomatic démarche cannot.

To be sure, the joint statement that Trump and Kim released after their meeting left a lot to be desired. Kim did not commit to verifiable and irreversib­le dismantlem­ent of North Korea’s nuclear programs. Trump gave props to a dictator who, according to the United Nations, belongs in a docket before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. Trump surprised his South Korean ally by announcing he would cancel joint United States-south Korea military exercises that help to keep the peace on the Korean Peninsula. The photo opportunit­y of a face-to-face meeting with the leader of the free world is the ultimate legitimize­r for this nuclear rogue state.

Yet, in the case of North Korea, there are never good policy options — there are only choices between the bad and the worse.

Trump’s diplomacy, however unconventi­onal, has pierced the isolation bubble of the North Korean leadership, which no previous president could do. The Singapore meetings will be remembered in North Korea’s domestic narrative as Kim’s coming-out party as the leader of the world’s newest nuclear-weapons state.

But the United States has set the agenda for next steps, with followup talks led by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. And Trump has implicitly set the autumn as the first deadline for some deliverabl­es with the promise of an invitation to the White House, presumably on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in September.

Trump now needs to get North Korea to provide a full declaratio­n of its nuclear weapons that will be verified by internatio­nal inspectors. After verificati­on, Kim must begin a process of dismantlin­g and removing his weapons at a point in the future. The internatio­nal community, despite its ambivalenc­e to Trump, will have to support the president in holding the North to these obligation­s.

Trump’s concession­s will raise eyebrows. What type of security assurances is the United States agreeing to? Will Trump eventually remove American forces from the Korean Peninsula in return for de-nucleariza­tion? And why did the United States not insist on any human rights concession­s as part of the deal?

But despite its many flaws, the Singapore summit represents the start of a diplomatic process that takes us away from the brink of war.

North Korea will not be testing any more missiles or nuclear bombs while the diplomacy continues, and the talks led by Pompeo will hopefully make progress toward stopping the world’s worst runaway nuclear program.

For Pyongyang, it may not have mattered who won the 2016 United States presidenti­al election; North Korea would still have conducted many ballistic missile tests and a hydrogen bomb test. And a more convention­al president might not have broken the mould by addressing the problem with a direct meeting with the Korean dictator. Trump’s unconventi­onal approach leaves a lot to be desired in the foreign policy of the United States, but there was no other path to this less-than-satisfying but digestible outcome.

For the first time since 1953, the door has been opened to peace on the Korean Peninsula. It could close shut again in the near future — if North Korea’s past behaviour is any indication. The Singapore summit meeting was a modest start. It’s just the beginning, but, as Koreans say, to have begun is half-done.

 ?? KEVIN LIM / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un keeps an eye on U.S. President Donald Trump while documents are exchanged behind them.
KEVIN LIM / AFP / GETTY IMAGES North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un keeps an eye on U.S. President Donald Trump while documents are exchanged behind them.
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 ?? EVAN VUCCI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump, right, reaches to shakes hands with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore.
EVAN VUCCI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. President Donald Trump, right, reaches to shakes hands with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

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