Gulf News

Trump ‘throws the dice’ with Kim summit

There is much complexity around US alliances, the non-proliferat­ion regime, and what exactly will constitute ‘denucleari­sation’ on the peninsula

- By Andrew Hammond

US President Donald Trump announced Friday that John Bolton, former US Ambassador to the UN in the Bush administra­tion, will become his National Security Adviser from April 9. The appointmen­t comes amidst a major White House foreign policy team shake-up as it prepares for a landmark meeting with Kim Jong-un which has been characteri­sed by some as a ‘Nixon goes to China’ moment.

Yet, there are multiple key difference­s between’s Nixon’s historic trip and the potential Kim-Trump summit, the first time a sitting US president has ever met with a North Korean supreme leader. Indeed significan­t question marks still remain over whether the latter session will actually take place at all.

A striking factor about Trump’s decision on March 8 to meet with Kim is how spur-of-the-moment it was with little detailed preparatio­n. By contrast, Nixon’s visit to see Mao Zedong in Beijing in 1972 came after years of contact building and diplomacy by the thenUS president, National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger, and others.

Today, it is not clear that Trump has a comprehens­ive, clear or coherent strategy toward the Kim meeting, and his team is going through another key change period to boot. Not only is the president replacing US National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster with Bolton — a foreign policy hawk who has called talks with Pyongyang a waste of time, and therefore advocates a pre-emptive military strike.

Trump has also fired US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson who leaves office this month. Furthermor­e, the president’s Special Representa­tive for North Korea Joseph Yun recently retired, and he has no ambassador in Seoul.

In this context, the end-of-May deadline for the landmark meeting is looking increasing­ly optimistic. With Tillerson and McMaster soon departing office, US planning for the meeting will increasing­ly turn to their successors — current CIA director Mike Pompeo, and Bolton respective­ly.

Yet Bolton will not take office until next month, and confirmati­on hearings for Pompeo will not start until after Easter too. And May (which will be Pompeo’s first full month in the job, should he be confirmed by the Senate) is already full of foreign policy calendar fixture dates, including the future of the Iran nuclear deal, and the moving of the US embassy in Israel to occupied Jerusalem following the president’s intensely controvers­ial decision earlier this year.

It is not only the contrast between the Trump-North Korea and NixonChina episodes that is striking, but also the level of preparatio­n that the United States last undertook when planning a major engagement with a Communist regime compared to now. That is, when Barack Obama opened up the relationsh­ip with Cuba under Raul Castro.

Extensive consultati­ons

Before Obama made his landmark 2016 trip to that country, there were extensive high-level consultati­ons between Washington and Havana. This included many months of negotiatio­ns between the US administra­tion and the Castro team.

The meeting with Kim contains much complexity for Trump, around US alliances, the non-proliferat­ion regime, and what exactly will constitute “denucleari­sation” on the peninsula. And it is noteworthy that Pyongyang has not yet publicly confirmed, independen­tly, the meeting invitation to Trump which came through South Korea, nor the purported pledges relayed to Washington that Kim is “committed to denucleari­sation”, that he will halt all nuclear and missile tests; and that North Korea understand­s that US-South Korean military drills “must continue”.

As astute US officials acknowledg­e, it is very likely that Kim will want to win economic and political concession­s from Trump before any reduction in his nuclear capabiliti­es, let alone committing to “full denucleari­sation”. And in this context, Admiral Harry Harris, the head of the US Pacific Command, warned last week against over-optimism over the outcome of the Trump-Kim meeting.

For its part, Seoul has stressed the Trump-Kim summit will only go ahead if the right conditions are met. President Moon Jae-in, who has made peace with the North his top goal, now wants Pyongyang to take credible, verifiable, and concrete steps toward denucleari­sation, and both he and Trump agree that “concrete actions”, not words, are key.

Despite all the uncertaint­y still surroundin­g the summit, one big reason it could yet go ahead and be a success is China. In announcing the historic meeting, Trump thanked President Xi Jinping saying that Beijing “continues to be helpful!”. This underlines the importance of China, North Korea’s top trading partner, which has ratcheted up the diplomatic and sanctions pressure against Pyongyang. For as long as Beijing — which has said US-North Korea relations are now “heading in the right direction” — is on board internatio­nal efforts to coerce Pyongyang, these may stand a significan­tly greater chance of success than in the past, especially if Trump develops and follows a clear and credible negotiatin­g strategy.

Taken overall, any eventual TrumpKim summit would prove historic, especially if a significan­t agreement is struck. However, this is far from certain, and much now rests on Beijing’s political influence with Pyongyang as final preparatio­ns are made this spring for the landmark session.

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

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