Toronto Star

The world according to Trump

Lavish praise for dictator, vicious insults for ally — nations watch in astonishme­nt as U.S. president sets the global relations playbook on fire

- DAVID NAKAMURA, PHILIP RUCKER, ANNA FIFIELD AND ANNE GEARAN

SINGAPORE— U.S. President Donald Trump capped a historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un here Tuesday by sketching a path to prosperity for the isolated nation. But it remained highly uncertain whether the young dictator would embrace the offer by agreeing to eliminate his nuclear arsenal.

Over the course of nearly five hours at the secluded and opulent Capella resort, Trump and Kim sought to establish what the president called “a very special bond” through a series of intimate meetings, including a stroll that culminated with the president giving the young dictator a peek inside the armoured presidenti­al limousine.

Later, the two men sat next to each other to sign a joint declaratio­n pledging to work toward peace and to denucleari­ze the Korean Peninsula.

“We’re ready to write a new chapter between our nations,” Trump said at a news conference, calling the summit “honest, direct and productive.”

“The past does not have to define the future,” he added. “Yesterday’s conflict does not have to be tomorrow’s war. As history has proved over and over, adversarie­s can become friends.”

Yet despite the bonhomie, the agreement, just more than a page long, was perhaps most notable for its lack of details.

Reporters crowded into a Singapore auditorium Tuesday, expecting U.S. President Donald Trump to walk out and announce the results of his historic meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Suddenly, two huge screens on either side of the empty podium came to life. Soaring music boomed over the speakers, and the reporters were bombarded with a montage portraying North Korea as some sort of paradise.

Golden sunrises. Gleaming skylines and high-speed trains. Children skipping through Kim Il Sung square in Pyongyang, North Korean flags waving between images of Egyptian pyramids, the Taj Mahal and the Lincoln Memorial.

In a split-screen shot, Kim Jong Un waved to an adoring crowd while Trump stood beside him with his thumb in the air. The pair appeared over and over again, like running mates in a campaign video.

The film went on like this for several minutes, with brief interludes of missiles, soldiers and warships interrupti­ng the fanfare.

Some journalist­s, unable to understand the Koreanlang­uage narration, assumed they were watching one of Pyongyang’s infamous propaganda films. “What country are we in?” asked a reporter from the filing centre.

But then the video looped, playing this time in English. And then Trump walked onto the stage and explained that the film was not North Korean propaganda.

It had been made in America, by or on the orders of his White House, for the benefit of Kim.

“I hope you liked it,” Trump told the reporters. “I thought it was good. I thought it was interestin­g enough to show. … And I think he loved it.”

As Trump explained it, the video was an elevator pitch — the sort of glitzy production that Trump might have once used to persuade an investor to finance a hotel and that he now hopes will persuade the leader of one of the most repressive regimes in the world to end nearly 70 years of internatio­nal isolation and militant hostility to the United States.

The nearly five-minute movie even had its own Hollywoods­tyle vanity logo: A Destiny Pictures Production, though a film company by the same name in Los Angeles denied any involvemen­t in making it, and the White House has not yet responded to questions about it.

“Of those alive today, only a small number will leave a lasting impact,” the narrator said near the beginning, as alternatin­g shots of Trump, Kim and North Korean pageantry flashed on the screen.

“And only a very few will make decisions or take actions to renew their homeland, or change the course of history.”

The message was clear: Kim had a decision to make. Then the film progressed from grim black-and-white shots of the United States’ 1950s-era war with North Korea into a colourful montage of parades and a golden sunrise.

“The past doesn’t have to be the future,” the narrator said. “What if a people that share a common and rich heritage can find a common future?”

The same technique repeated even more dramatical­ly a minute later in the film, when the footage seemed to melt into a horror montage of war planes and missiles beating down on North Korean cities — much like the apocalypti­c propaganda videos Pyongyang had produced just a few months ago, when Kim and Trump sounded as if they were on the brink of nuclear war.

But in the Trump film, the destructio­n rewound itself. The missiles flew back into to their launchers, and a science-fiction like version North Korea took its place — one of crane-dotted skylines, crowded highways, computeriz­ed factories and drones, all presided over by a waving, grinning Kim.

“You can have medical breakthrou­ghs, an abundance of resources, innovative technology and new discoverie­s,” the narrator said, the footage more and more resembling a Hollywood movie trailer as it built to its finale:

“Featuring President Donald Trump and Chairman Kim Jong Un in a meeting to remake history,” the narrator concluded, as Korean words flashed on a black background: “It is going to become a reality?”

The reporters present had many questions. “Do you now see Kim Jong Un as an equal?” a Time magazine correspond­ent asked. “In what way?” Trump asked. “You just showed a video that showed you and Kim Jong Un on equal footing, and discussing the future of the country.” Trump may have misunderst­ood the question, as he referred in his answer to his closed-door talks and a few carefully negotiated photo ops with Kim — not the U.S.-made video that presented the totalitari­an autocrat as a hero.

“If I have to say I’m sitting on a stage with Chairman Kim and that gets us to save 30 million lives — it could be more than that — I’m willing to sit on a stage, I’m willing to travel to Singapore, very proudly,” Trump said.

“Are you concerned the video you just showed could be used by Kim as propaganda, to show him as …”

Trump cut the question off. “No, I’m not concerned at all. We can use that video for other countries.”

The president was more talkative when discussing how Kim had reacted to the video, which Trump had presumably played for him during a brief, private meeting hours earlier.

“We didn’t have a big screen like you have the luxury of having,” Trump said. “We didn’t need it, because we had it on cassette, uh, an iPad.

“And they played it. About eight of their representa­tives were watching it, and I thought they were fascinated by it. I thought it was well done. I showed it to you because that’s the future. I mean, that could very well be the future.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? ON NORTH KOREA . . . After their historic summit in Singapore, Trump touted his “very special bond” with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ON NORTH KOREA . . . After their historic summit in Singapore, Trump touted his “very special bond” with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump signs the agreement with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Singapore Tuesday at the historic summit meeting.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Donald Trump signs the agreement with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Singapore Tuesday at the historic summit meeting.

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