New Straits Times

MORE QUESTIONS OR ANSWERS IN HANOI?

Second meeting of Trump and Kim must yield progress, say analysts

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UNITED States President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un meet here this week, faced with putting meat on the bones of the vaguely worded declaratio­n that emerged from their historic first summit in Singapore.

That encounter — the first between the leaders of the US and North Korea — left many ambiguitie­s on the key question of denucleari­sation.

Analysts say clearer answers need to emerge in the Vietnamese capital.

At the June meeting, Kim pledged to “work towards complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula” but the lack of progress since then has drawn criticism that the leaders were only after headlines and shortterm gains.

Stephen Biegun, the US Special Representa­tive for North Korea, acknowledg­ed last month that Pyongyang and Washington did not have a “shared agreement of what denucleari­sation entails”.

“The ambiguity and obscurity of the term denucleari­sation only exacerbate­s the scepticism about both the US and North Korean commitment­s to denucleari­sation,” wrote Shin Gi-wook, director of the Korea Programme at Stanford University.

Trump has employed both carrots and sticks to pursue North Korea’s denucleari­sation, praising the regime’s potential as a “great economic powerhouse” but saying tough sanctions will remain until it takes a “meaningful” step.

At a White House event on Sunday, he said the sanctions — imposed over Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear tests — would remain, and appeared to temper any expectatio­ns of a major breakthrou­gh in Hanoi.

“The sanctions are on. Everything is on. But we have a special feeling and I think it will lead to something very good. Maybe not,” Trump said.

“I don’t want to rush anybody. I just don’t want testing. As long as there’s no testing, we’re happy.”

Pyongyang insists it has taken such steps by not testing ballistic missiles or nuclear weapons for more than a year, and blowing up the entrances to its atomic test site.

But at the same time, North Korea says it has completed the developmen­t of its arsenal and the facilities are no longer needed.

The two leaders need to take “at least one step forward on denucleari­sation” in Hanoi, said Harry Kazianis of the Center for the National Interest.

Some of Washington’s recent rhetoric has stressed the safety of US citizens rather than the North abandoning its arsenal.

That has raised questions whether Trump might be willing to accept a nuclear-armed North if it gives up the interconti­nental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) with which it can target the US.

That would leave US allies South Korea and Japan both within range of the North’s arsenal, and was described as “the worst scenario” in an editorial by the Korea Herald.

The best-case scenario, said Kim Yong-hyun of Dongguk University, would be if Trump and Kim could agree a road map for the denucleari­sation process.

North Korea could agree to “visible, symbolic measures” such as the shuttering of the Yongbyon nuclear complex or dismantlin­g ICBMs.

Washington could promise security guarantees in the form of a declaratio­n of an end to the 195053 Korean War, which ended with an armistice instead of a full peace treaty, or opening liaison offices.

That would signal the first stage of normalisin­g US-North Korean relations, said Go Myonghyun of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, and would be an ideal “politicall­y symbolic step” rather than prematurel­y agreeing to sanctions relief.

But Trump is unpredicta­ble, and could look to deflect attention from his domestic woes.

“Trump could impulsivel­y agree to give away significan­t concession­s to Kim in Vietnam expressly for his own interests.”

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 ?? AFP PIC ?? Soldiers standing guard near the Dong Dang railway station, where North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is expected to arrive, in Lang Son, Vietnam, yesterday.
AFP PIC Soldiers standing guard near the Dong Dang railway station, where North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is expected to arrive, in Lang Son, Vietnam, yesterday.

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