Gulf News

Trump and Kim to hold second meeting in Hanoi

‘I look forward to seeing Chairman Kim & advancing the cause of peace’

- RUSSELL GOLDMAN

US President Donald Trump will meet the leader of North Korea, Kim Jong-un, this month in Hanoi, Vietnam, choosing the capital of a communist nation for a summit intended to eliminate a potential nuclear threat.

“My representa­tives have just left North Korea after a very productive meeting and an agreed upon time and date for the second Summit with Kim Jong-un,” Trump said on Twitter. “It will take place in Hanoi, Vietnam, on February 27 & 28. I look forward to seeing Chairman Kim & advancing the cause of peace!”

Trump revealed in his State of the Union address that the meeting would be in Vietnam but did not disclose the city. The US had explored Danang, a coastal city where US troops arrived in 1965 for a war that would scar a generation, but the North Koreans were reported to prefer Hanoi.

Trump and his aides have cited Vietnam as an example of a communist nation that emerged from internatio­nal isolation to develop a dynamic economy. Trump has sought to persuade Kim that giving up his nuclear weapons would enable him to transform his impoverish­ed land into a thriving country. The meeting will be the second between Trump and Kim after an inaugural get-together last June in Singapore.

President Donald Trump and Kim Jongun, the leader of North Korea, will attempt to iron out the details of a history-making agreement on denucleari­sation when the pair meet later this month in Vietnam for their second face-toface dialogue.

The leaders make for strange diplomatic bedfellows: Neither man has a reputation for making friends out of foes, and each has publicly mocked the other. But in the eight months since their first meeting in Singapore there have been notable changes on the Korean Peninsula, including the repatriati­on of American soldiers’ remains, a cessation in North Korean missile and nuclear tests and a decrease in American-led war games.

Trump and Kim agreed at their previous meeting to the “complete denucleari­sation” of the peninsula. But since then, the two sides have been unable to agree on what that phrase actually means, leading to a stalemate and a breakdown in talks. Here’s what to expect at the upcoming summit.

Burnish personal brands

The North Korean diplomats and officials likely to attend the meeting are some of the country’s most experience­d negotiator­s, who have deftly wrangled with several American administra­tions. Among those expected are Ri Yong Ho, a seasoned diplomat who represente­d North Korea for years during the “six-party talks” in the 2000s and is now the country’s foreign minister; and Kim Yong Chol, a former spymaster and one of Kim Jong-un’s closest advisers.

Those expected to join the president include Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state; John R. Bolton, the national security adviser who has disagreed with Trump on the success of the Singapore talks; and Stephen Biegun, a former Ford Motor executive who was recently appointed to oversee talks with the North Koreans.

All eyes, however, will be on Trump and Kim, both of whom hope to use the meeting to burnish their own personal brands. Kim wants his people to see him being taken seriously and as the equal of the leader of the world’s most powerful country. Trump wants to score points at home by closing a historic deal that has stymied his predecesso­rs. Both men seem to relish stagecraft as much as statecraft, and each is keenly aware of how the other wants to be seen.

Bullet points

At the Singapore talks last June, Kim and Trump agreed to a four-point plan. The bullet points — each no more than a sentence — included establishi­ng relations between their countries; building a “lasting and stable peace regime”; working “toward complete denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula”; and repatriati­ng the remains of Americans killed during the Korean War.

Left undecided were the order in which those points were to be executed and the definition­s of terms like “peace regime” and “complete denucleari­sation.” After the meeting in Singapore, Trump declared the question of denucleari­sation “largely solved,” but the two sides have since been at loggerhead­s.

Washington wants North Korea to end its nuclear weapons programme. But for the North, those weapons are the only leverage it has to get what it really wants — a formal end to the Korean War and diplomatic recognitio­n from the United States.

The North said as recently as December that it would not dismantle its weapons programme until the United States diminished its military capacity in the vicinity of the Korean Peninsula.

Symbolic choice

Trump announced Friday that the talks would be held in Hanoi, Vietnam’s capital. Vietnam is a powerful symbolic choice. Like North Korea, Vietnam and the United States had fraught relations for decades after a deadly war. More recently, the countries have normalised relations. Vietnam, like North Korea, is a communist country. Through capitalist reforms it has emerged from internatio­nal isolation to become one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. Danang, a port city where US soldiers once relaxed on a stretch of sand then known as China Beach, had also been floated as a potential site for the talks. But the North Koreans were reported to prefer Hanoi.

Good relationsh­ip

Though a second round of talks had been rumoured for months, it was not until Trump’s State of the Union address that a date was confirmed.

The talks will be held on February 27 and 28, the president said. Trump was last in Vietnam in November 2017 to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit meeting.

“Much work remains to be done, but my relationsh­ip with Kim Jong-un is a good one,” Trump said in his address. “Chairman Kim and I will meet again on February 27 and 28 in Vietnam.”

Carrot and sticks

The United States and North Korea have previously come to agreements on denucleari­sation and the lifting of sanctions, only to see the deals fall apart at the last minute or be chipped away by distrust over time.

Previous American presidents have tried a mix of carrots (aid and engagement) and sticks (punishing sanctions) to persuade the North to discontinu­e its weapons programme.

North Korea has viewed denucleari­sation as taking place in sequenced “phases” for which it demands “simultaneo­us” incentives from Washington for each step. Under the Singapore agreement, North Korea must work “toward” denucleari­sation while Washington is obliged to improve ties and remove hostilitie­s on the divided Korean Peninsula.

 ?? AFP ?? North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un with US President Donald Trump during their historic US-North Korea summit on Sentosa island in Singapore on June 11, 2018.
AFP North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un with US President Donald Trump during their historic US-North Korea summit on Sentosa island in Singapore on June 11, 2018.

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