The Asian Age

All eyes on Trump- Kim summit: Will it happen or not?

- Skand Tayal The writer is a retired ambassador

The live images of the historic April 27 summit between the two Koreas mesmerised the world. The audacity of thought in the Panmunjom Declaratio­n for Peace, Prosperity and Unificatio­n of the Korean peninsula stunned the internatio­nal strategic community, particular­ly in the background of gathering war clouds in the autumn of last year. President Moon Jae- in and Chairman Kim Jong- un spelt out their common vision for the future of the peninsula and Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping were left scrambling to keep their core interests upfront in the future negotiatio­ns.

The global attention is now focused on the upcoming Trump- Kim summit on June 12 in Singapore. The events and preparatio­ns were proceeding far too smoothly and the first jolt was delivered on May 15 by North Korea’s first vice minister for foreign affairs Kim Kyegwan. He cautioned that “if the US is trying to drive us into a corner to force our unilateral nuclear abandonmen­t, we will no longer be interested in such dialogue and cannot but reconsider our proceeding to the DPRK- US summit.” This is obviously part of the negotiatin­g strategy and North Korea will play the game of brinkmansh­ip with its consummate skill.

Mr Kim has repeatedly demonstrat­ed his sense of timing, depth of strategic thinking and ability to control the agenda as well as the pace of North Korea’s negotiatio­ns with other parties. His offer to publicly shut the Punggye- ri nuclear test site in the coming weeks had put pressure on Mr Trump to finalise the date of his summit three weeks in advance. Mr Kim has already promised an end to all nuclear and missile tests and released three American prisoners; so what more can be achieved during the Trump- Kim summit?

Mr Trump has a laser like focus on “denucleari­sation of North Korea” whereas Mr Kim is likely to negotiate the terms of a “nuclear free Korean peninsula”. The continued presence of 28,500 US troops in South Korea, port calls by nuclear armed US naval ships, scale and frequency of USSouth Korea military exercises and the validity of the US’ extended nuclear deterrence over South Korea ( and Japan?) would be on the table as bargaining chips in return of a “complete, irreversib­le and verifiable” denucleari­sation of North Korea. This would necessaril­y entail lengthy and fraught negotiatio­ns.

US national security adviser John Bolton made a psychologi­cal blunder when he told a TV channel that the 2003 agreement for Libya’s denucleari­sation could be a model for the agreement with North Korea. Such a comparison would have triggered all the negative impulses of the paranoid North Korean leadership wedded to regime survival and preservati­on of the state and governing system of DPRK.

China was feeling left out in this entire process. Chinese analyst have noted that the only role assigned to China in the Panmunjom Declaratio­n is “quadrilate­ral meetings involving the two Koreas, the United States and China, with a view to declaring an end to the war, turning the armistice into a peace treaty, and establishi­ng a permanent and solid peace regime”. The Chinese have questioned how China can be excluded from the denucleari­sation process on the Korean peninsula. China acted swiftly and foreign minister Wang Yi read the riot act to Mr Kim when he went to Pyongyang on May 2. Mr Kim quickly made amends and met Mr Xi in Dalian, China on May 7 to coordinate its negotiatin­g position with Chinese interests.

South Korean analysts accept that enhancing China’s engagement, as a supporter of the inter- Korean peace process, would be one of the critical missions of the two Koreas. The New York Times has commented that China worries that “North Korea is using China’s growing tension with the United States to reduce its dependence on its long- time benefactor”.

According to a Korea Times analyst, the Chinese priorities in the final outcome of the Korean peace would be first the removal of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense ( THAAD) system and secondly withdrawal of American troops from South Korea. President Moon has not been keen on the continuati­on of THAAD batteries on South Korean soil and has already agreed with China to freeze deployment of any additional THAAD batteries. On withdrawal of US troops, Mr Trump may be inclined to drasticall­y reduce the number of American soldiers in South Korea, which would be in line with his declared policy of reducing America’s security commitment­s and expenditur­e on bases abroad.

The outcome of the forthcomin­g Trump- Kim summit would hinge on some common understand­ing of the concept of “denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula” and the series of steps and the timeline to advance towards that goal.

While the US establishm­ent has called for a “complete, irreversib­le and verifiable” denucleari­sation of North Korea, Mr Trump’s oft- repeated promise to the American people during the presidenti­al campaign and after assuming office has been that North Korea would not be allowed to develop credible capacity to mount a nuclear strike on mainland US territory. While Mr Kim claimed last November that after the series of nuclear and missile tests, North Korea had acquired the interconti­nental ballistic missile ( ICBM) capability to attack mainland US, American experts express doubts and assert that North Korea is yet to develop and test the technology for safe re- entry of the nuclear warhead in earth’s atmosphere as well as the required level of miniaturis­ation. Perhaps this ambiguity gives room for both Mr Trump and Mr Kim to come to some understand­ing.

In the ensuing negotiatio­ns towards a peace treaty and denucleari­sation, South Korea is likely to play the role of a mediator between the United States on the one hand and North Korea and China on the other. In any case South Korea was not a signatory to the tripartite July 1953 Armistice and the historic April 27, 2018 Moon- Kim declaratio­n already amounts to a de- facto peace agreement between the two Koreas.

The denucleari­sation of North Korea can only be a process with major reciprocal steps by the United States and South Korea. The relevance of the US- South Korea Defence Treaty would also come into question. The main demand from North Korea would be the immediate lifting or substantia­l easing of the crippling economic sanctions against it which would require UN Security Council approval.

One may expect a roller- coaster ride as the US and North Korea inch towards the June 12 summit. The summit will happen only if Mr Trump wants to go ahead as North Korean red lines have now been drawn.

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump ( left), North Korean leader Kim Jong- un
US President Donald Trump ( left), North Korean leader Kim Jong- un
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