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Analysis: Trump’s N.Korea summit falls short of Nixon-goes-to-China moment

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Donald Trump’s dramatic meeting with North Korea’s leader may have been choreograp­hed to look like a Nixon-goes-to-China moment, but the summit appears to have failed to secure any concrete commitment­s by Pyongyang for dismantlin­g its nuclear arsenal.

Although Trump was quick to declare success for the unpreceden­ted summit with Kim Jong Un marked by handshakes and smiles, experts said a joint statement signed in Singapore seemed mostly to rehash old broken promises made by Pyongyang to successive U.S. administra­tions.

That suggested that any lasting benefit to Trump on the world stage or at home will depend on whether, in the next stages of negotiatio­ns, he can turn the summit’s made-for-TV script into tangible progress toward Pyongyang’s nuclear disarmamen­t.

Trump’s supporters, who relish his unconventi­onal diplomatic style, are likely to hail the summit as a foreign policy win for the president over one of America’s most bitter longtime foes even as he feuds with Washington’s closest allies after leaving an economic summit in Canada in disarray over the weekend.

On the domestic front, Trump is likely to tout his diplomatic engagement with North Korea as proof he is working to protect the United States as part of his “America First” agenda, although the summit did not appear to yield specific safeguards against Pyongyang’s long-range nuclear missiles.

Fellow Republican­s, however, could attempt to use the summit to bolster their contention that American voters should allow them to retain control of Congress in pivotal congressio­nal elections in November.

Many experts remained sceptical that Kim will ever give up his nuclear weapons, even though Trump insisted the process of denucleari­sation will start “very, very quickly.”

“Unfortunat­ely, we do not know if Kim has made a strategic decision to denucleari­se and it is unclear if further negotiatio­ns will lead to the end goal of denucleari­sation,” said Anthony Ruggiero, senior fellow at Washington’s Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s think tank. “This looks like a restatemen­t of where we left negotiatio­ns more than 10 years ago and not a major step forward.” Trump may be credited with creating a positive atmosphere around the talks in Singapore, where a day of bonhomie in front of the cameras contrasted sharply with last year’s exchange of insults and threats with Kim that raised fears of war.

But, with the summit ending only with the signing of a statement of intent and offering no timetable for action, questions remained about whether the meeting has produced enough results to boost his internatio­nal image and domestic standing over the longer term.

‘COMPLETE DENUCLEARI­SATION’

Trump and Kim’s joint pledge to work toward “complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula” was widely interprete­d as failing to convince North Korea to accept Washington’s definition that calls for Pyongyang to get rid of its arsenal. North Korea historical­ly has called for the removal of the U.S. “nuclear umbrella” over South Korea and Japan.

“There is almost nothing of significan­t substance - or even new — in this document. It is a list of aspiration­al goals,” said Evans Revere, a former U.S. negotiator with North Korea. “This is a win for North Korea, which seems to have yielded nothing.”

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