Ottawa Citizen

Trump far from ready for North Korea talks

Impulsive president has given Kim the strong hand, says James Trottier.

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The announceme­nt that Donald Trump had agreed to a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un caught everyone, including the U.S. secretarie­s of state and defense, South Korean envoys and North Korea, by surprise. It was classic Trump: Act first and think later.

His decision was driven by Trump’s impulsive personalit­y, a reality-TV view of the world, an obsession with doing the opposite of past presidents and the conviction that he is an unmatched deal-maker. This was not part of a long-term strategy. On the contrary, Trump’s North Korea policy is improvised and consists of threats, military preparatio­ns and punishing North Korea rather than preparatio­ns for negotiatio­ns. The U.S. is now scrambling to find officials in the depleted State Department with the required expertise to prepare for the summit.

By contrast, the summit is the culminatio­n of a longterm strategy by Kim Jong Un to develop his nuclear arsenal, withstand sanctions and come to the negotiatin­g table with a strong hand.

In agreeing to the meeting, Trump upended long-standing U.S. policy and diplomatic practice. First, the U.S. has insisted for years that it would not talk to North Korea unless North Korea made a verifiable commitment to irreversib­le denucleari­zation. In this case, all North Korea has agreed to is what it has proposed to past administra­tions: a vague willingnes­s to discuss denucleari­zation in return for an undefined security guarantee for North Korea.

Second, the longtime U.S. position was reiterated by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson just hours before the announceme­nt of the summit when he said it would be premature to consider talks in the absence of such a verifiable commitment.

Third, U.S. diplomatic practice is that before any negotiatio­ns, there are exhaustive inter-agency consultati­ons followed by developmen­t of a detailed negotiatin­g plan. In the case of the Iran agreement, the U.S. negotiatin­g document ran to 100 pages. In this case, the U.S. will be hard-pressed to develop a detailed negotiatin­g position prior to the summit, let alone get Trump to follow it. By contrast, Kim can be expected to come to the talks with a well-formulated negotiatin­g position.

Fourth, preliminar­y diplomatic negotiatio­ns are always held at officials level, with any presidenti­al involvemen­t kept in reserve as a valuable bargaining chip. In this case, Trump has given away a major card without receiving anything in return. Moreover, preliminar­y discussion­s lessen the risk of counter-productive failure of talks at the highest level.

Fifth, Trump has provided North Korea and Kim personally with a significan­t diplomatic triumph and political legitimacy, as North Korea has long sought such a meeting, in vain.

Sixth, members of his administra­tion have realized the risks of his impulsive decision and have tried to walk it back and re-impose preconditi­ons. However, Trump has undermined their efforts insisting the meeting will go ahead, time and place to be determined.

There are a variety of possible outcomes for the summit:

1) The “do no harm” scenario is that the two sides have an amicable photo-op and agree on further discussion­s at the level of officials.

2) Driven by Trump’s desire to make a deal, Kim’s determinat­ion to maintain his nuclear arsenal and Kim’s satisfacti­on that he has achieved a sufficient deterrent status, the above scenario could be accompanie­d by an agreement to continue the suspension of tests, perhaps in return for the easing of sanctions.

3) Seeking a deal, ignoring the advice of his experts and believing he had received some sort of denucleari­zation commitment from Kim, Trump could entertain North Korean demands for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Korea. This is an unlikely result and one that would alarm South Korea, Japan and U.S. experts.

4) Kim could make a general commitment to denucleari­ze. A genuine commitment is very unlikely and very difficult to verify. Huge and politicall­y unacceptab­le concession­s by the U.S. would be demanded, including withdrawal of U.S. troops from the peninsula, renunciati­on of the mutual defence treaty with South Korea, complete lifting of sanctions, economic assistance and the conclusion of a peace treaty.

5) The meeting could swiftly flounder if Trump insists that denucleari­zation is the only purpose of the talks and refuses to entertain lifting of sanctions or security guarantees for North Korea.

6) The worst-case scenario would be a meeting marked by insults and threats, followed by military preparatio­ns. This would alarm South Korea and Japan and is why such a summit should be avoided in the first place.

Given the unpredicta­bility of the two leaders and their past history, it’s still a question whether the summit will actually occur. If it does, the final result could be some combinatio­n of the above. South Korea and Japan fear both inappropri­ate concession­s by Trump and a breakdown in talks leading to renewed emphasis on military options. Kim will try to manipulate Trump using charm, flattery and appeals to his vanity, tactics that have proven successful for other leaders dealing with Trump.

Various venues have been mentioned for the summit including Switzerlan­d, China, Russia, the De-Militarize­d Zone (DMZ) and Pyongyang. The most likely venue is the DMZ, a neutral area easily accessible by both leaders. Both sides would probably be reluctant to give the appearance that China or Russia would in some way influence the result, and Switzerlan­d is too far from Pyongyang. Moreover, Kim has never left North Korea as leader and it is doubtful he would start now. From a U.S. perspectiv­e, the worst venue would be Pyongyang itself, giving North Korea a major home-field advantage, the ability to shape the agenda and to put on a show for the easily impressed president. Of course, opposition by his own experts could make Pyongyang seem more attractive to the contrarian Trump.

Ultimately, the issue is not whether there should be talks between the U.S. and North Korea; in fact, there should be. The U.S. position attaching the preconditi­on of verifiable denucleari­zation before talks was always unrealisti­c as the North Koreans were never going to agree to that. The issue is whether the U.S .is prepared for talks and whether Donald Trump, unversed in the facts and subtleties of the Korean Peninsula, should be the one to conduct such talks. The answer is no. James Trottier is a Fellow of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute and a former career Canadian diplomat who directed the political/economic (diplomatic) programs at the Canadian Embassies in South Korea, Thailand and the Philippine­s and also served at the Permanent Mission of Canada to the UN in New York. He was accredited to North Korea and led four Canadian diplomatic delegation­s to North Korea in 2015 and 2016 and has served as a diplomatic liaison officer to U.S./UN Forces in South Korea. Reach him at: trottierja­mes@hotmail.com

Trump’s North Korea policy is improvised and consists of threats ... rather than preparatio­ns for negotiatio­ns.

JAMES TROTTIER, ex-career Canadian diplomat

 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/KOREA NEWS SERVICE VIA AP ?? U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, above, is driven by his contrarian ways and upends U.S. policy and diplomatic practice, writes James Trottier.
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/KOREA NEWS SERVICE VIA AP U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, above, is driven by his contrarian ways and upends U.S. policy and diplomatic practice, writes James Trottier.

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