The Borneo Post

Pompeo preaches prosperity to North Korea, via Vietnam

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HANOI: Washington’s top diplomat Mike Pompeo was addressing Vietnamese business leaders but his real audience was not in the Hanoi dining room.

The US Secretary of State was sending a message from the thriving commercial heart of this once war-torn city all the way to North Korea.

Vietnam fought a brutal war to expel American invaders, but now the former foes enjoy burgeoning trade ties and a cautious but real friendship.

And, whether talking at a business dinner or walking the bustling shopping streets of old Hanoi, Pompeo wants Kim Jong Un to know it.

If only North Korea were to surrender its nuclear arsenal, he suggests, it too could grow rich like its fellow one party state Vietnam.

Addressing business leaders, Pompeo said that US-Vietnam trade had grown 8,000 per cent in the past decade, as it rose to relative prosperity.

“I say all of that because it’s important, but I hope that the United States, that one day we can share the same relationsh­ip with North Korea,” he said.

Last month US President Donald Trump met Kim in Singapore at a historic summit designed to open a diplomatic route outside of conflict.

The meeting culminated with the leaders signing a pledge that Pyongyang would work towards denucleari­sation in exchange for security guarantees.

Trump hailed it as a breakthrou­gh, boasting that the threat of nuclear war had ended and that the world could now “sleep well.”

But the diplomatic process could now be in jeopardy. Pompeo visited Pyongynag last week seeking a more concrete plan for denucleari­sation.

After he left, North Korea issued a scathing statement, accusing Washington of a “gangsterli­ke” obsession with forcing its unilateral disarmamen­t.

Kim’s regime sees “denucleari­sation” not as a onesided surrender of its hard-won but United Nations-prohibited nuclear arsenal.

Instead they favor a step-by-step process of political normalisat­ion and a reduction in the implicit threat posed by US forces.

Pompeo, speaking in Japan, said there were “things that would take place along the way that would achieve the security assurances te North Koreans need”.

But he was clear there would be no relief from UN- backed economic sanctions until the US vision of denucleari­sation is well underway.

So the diplomatic process faces a dangerous stand- off, perhaps a dead end, but the US envoy has one more card up his sleeve to play.

He and Trump hope that Kim – or those with influence over him – may be wooed by the prospect of eventual, post-nuclear prosperity.

In a much-mocked advertoria­lstyle video shown to Kim at the Singapore summit last month, Trump’s officials touted North Korea’s economic potential.

Trump, back in his comfort zone in his former job as a real estate promoter, has spoken of future of tourism and beach hotels.

In Vietnam a day after leaving Pyongyang, Pompeo found what he hopes will be a better image: a communist country and former foe now thriving as a US partner.

If Washington and Hanoi can put behind the wounds of war and their ideologica­l difference­s, why can’t North Korea hope for a similar future?

“In light of the onceunimag­inable prosperity and partnershi­p we have with Vietnam today, I have a message for Chairman Kim Jong Un,” he said.

“President Trump believes your country can replicate this path. It’s yours if you’ll seize the moment. The miracle could be yours.

“The choice now lies with North Korea and its people,” he warned.

To underline his message, immediatel­y after his business seminar, Pompeo took to the hot and humid streets of Hanoi by night.

In a brief walkabout escorted by a phalanx of US security agents and Vietnamese police, he saw a thriving tourist district.

Vast crowds of Vietnamese, on foot, on scooters and minibuses thronged streets that are now pedestrian­ised at weekends.

Traditiona­l Vietnamese eateries and businesses were busy, but alongside were US chains like McDonald’s fast food and internatio­nal designer brands. — AFP

 ??  ?? People are rescued by Self-Defense Forces personnel from Mabi Memorial Hospital that was isolated due to flood damage caused by heavy rain in Kurashiki, Okayama prefecture. — AFP photo
People are rescued by Self-Defense Forces personnel from Mabi Memorial Hospital that was isolated due to flood damage caused by heavy rain in Kurashiki, Okayama prefecture. — AFP photo

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