Sun.Star Pampanga

Unorthodox Trump faces toughest test yet in NKorea summit

-

Scatastrop­hic U.S. first strike pushed both leaders to take a risk. And Trump is the first U.S. president willing to sit-down with the autocratic ruler with so few concession­s, believing his self-professed negotiatin­g prowess will guide him though uncharted diplomatic waters.

Raising expectatio­ns in advance of the meeting, Trump said the outcome will rely heavily on his own instincts. The U.S. president, who prides himself on his deal-making prowess, said he will know “within the first minute” of meeting Kim whether the North Korean leader is serious about the nuclear negotiatio­ns.

“I think I’ll know pretty quickly whether or not, in my opinion, something positive will happen. And if I think it won’t happen, I’m not going to waste my time. I don’t want to waste his time,” Trump said.

“This is a leader who really is an unknown personalit­y,” Trump added of Kim. “People don’t know much about him. I think that he’s going to surprise on the upside, very much on the upside.”

White House aides described Trump in the days after receiving the initial Kim invitation as being obsessed by visions of winning the Nobel Peace Prize and using ‘The Art of the Deal’ to put his mark on the global order. In recent weeks Trump’s enthusiasm has been tempered somewhat by the challenge of deal-making with such an unpredicta­ble opponent. And there are worries from the White House to East Asian allies that Trump’s desire for an agreement will lead him to accept any deal — even if it’s a bad one.

Trump is set to dangle before Kim visions of protection, economic investment, and even a White House visit, in return for a commitment to abandon his nuclear weapons program. Kim, U.S. officials say, has agreed to put his stockpile of a half-hundred or more weapons on the table for negotiatio­n, but the two countries have offered differing visions of what that would entail. Despite Kim’s apparent eagerness for a summit with Trump, there are doubts that he would fully relinquish his nuclear arsenal, which he may see as his guarantor of his survival.

U.S. defense and intelligen­ce officials have assessed the North to be on the threshold of having the capability to strike anywhere in the continenta­l U.S. with a nuclear-tipped missile — a capacity that Trump and other U.S. officials have said they would not tolerate.

Trump reiterated his promise Saturday that the U.S. “will watch over and we’ll protect” Kim and his government in return for him giving up the nuclear program.

Traveling to Singapore, Trump is looking to temporaril­y escape his flaring personal conflicts with key U.S. allies over trade as well as domestic pressure like the swirling Russia probe. Acutely aware of his coverage in the media, Trump has enjoyed how North Korea has overshadow­ed some of the more negative coverage of his tumultuous White House.

Still, Trump’s team has not always been on the same page, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo — who has been leading the administra­tion’s efforts — more supportive, while the hawkish National Security Adviser John Bolton has been more skeptical. Bolton has been far less visible in the planning process, after a comment he made about favoring the “Libya model” for denucleari­zation enraged the North Koreans.

Libya gave up its program at an early stage only to see its longtime dictator overthrown and brutally killed years less than a decade later.

The summit timing, days after Trump left a trail of diplomatic wreckage as he exited the annual Group of Seven nations Saturday, cast further light on the extent to which he increasing­ly keeps his own counsel, eschewing the cautionary advice of aides and confident in his ability to single-handedly attempt to redraw the global order.

In Canada, the U.S. president threatened longtime allies over trade practices at a defiant exit press conference before dramatical­ly tweeting that host Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was “weak” and withdrawin­g his endorsemen­t of the group’s traditiona­l joint communique.

“His message from Quebec to Singapore is that he is going to meld the industrial democracie­s to his will — and bring back Russia,” said Steve Bannon, Trump’s former campaign and White House adviser.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines