Sun.Star Pampanga

After summit, China likely to remind N. Korea of close ties

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BEIJING — The outcome of the Singapore summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was good news for one absent but key player: China.

China has emerged a big winner at the summit after Trump made surprising pledges to suspend war games with South Korea and eventually pull U.S. troops from there. Beijing dislikes the U.S. military presence in South Korea and Japan and has urged Washington to suspend the drills that Pyongyang claims are rehearsals for invasion, in return for the North’s halting of nuclear activities.

China wants to see a reduction in foreign military forces in Northeast Asia and for the gap between Washington and its allies and partners to widen, said Ryan Hass, who directed China policy for the U.S. National Security Council during the former President Barack Obama administra­tion. “Beijing is now on track to achieve these objectives at little cost.”

But as soon as Kim steps off the plane China provided him for the Singapore trip, Beijing will be mindful of maintainin­g its influence over a Pyongyang that may feel less isolated after Trump showered Kim with praises, called him a “very talented man,” and made security concession­s in return for very little.

“Any improvemen­t I think in the bilateral relationsh­ip for the U.S. and North Korea, China could potentiall­y see as a loss for China,” said Paul Haenle, a former China director at the White House National Security Council in the Obama and George W. Bush administra­tions.

Analysts say they expected that Kim would meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping fairly quickly after the summit and that Xi would remind his North Korean counterpar­t about China’s willingnes­s to help the North develop its economy.

Despite recent tensions between the communist neighbors, Xi has met Kim twice since April, most recently hosting a banquet for him and strolling with the young leader along a beach and through lush gardens at a coastal Chinese city last month.

That meeting in Dalian was seen as an effort by China to ensure that Beijing’s voice was heard when Kim later met with Trump. In the on-again, off-again run-up to the summit, Trump at one point blamed Kim’s trip to China for creating an unwelcome “change in attitude” by the North Korean leader. China moved quickly to urge both sides not to cancel the meeting.

Such maneuvers highlight the delicate balance China has to strike between encouragin­g Pyongyang and Washington to engage on ending the North’s nuclear program and pushing Pyongyang too far into Trump’s embrace.

China would be wary if the suspension of military exercises led to some kind of larger rapprochem­ent between the U.S. and North Korea, Haenle said. China, which fought the U.S. on behalf of the North in the 195053 Korean War, wants a stable, independen­t North Korea as a buffer with South Korea and the thousands of U.S. troops stationed there. Beijing is also hoping to convince Seoul to remove a sophistica­ted U.S. missile defense system that China sees as a threat to its security.

China remains North Korea’s only major ally and chief provider of energy, aid and trade that keep the country’s broken economy afloat. Ties in recent months have frayed as China supported tougher U.N. sanctions on North Korea and suspended coal and iron ore imports. Pyongyang last year seemingly sought to humiliate Beijing by timing some of its missile tests for major global summits in China.

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