Khaleej Times

Has Trump pushed himself into a corner over N. Korea?

-

Like so much else that US President Donald Trump does, the North Korea negotiatio­ns dance is all about breaking the unwritten rules. Past presidents would have never allowed themselves to be put in the position where they could appear to be jerked around by a tin-pot dictator. Trump genuinely doesn’t care.

But how far would Trump go in breaking the rules, especially if a Nobel Peace Prize were in the offing? Would Trump be prepared to sign a peace treaty ending the Korean War and freezing North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme without insisting that North Korea definitive­ly denucleari­se?

A partial deal would essentiall­y mimic former president Barack Obama’s deal with Iran, which Trump long condemned and from which he has withdrawn. Making a deal with North Korea that is essentiall­y the same as the Iran deal would be an extraordin­ary act of political self-refutation.

Yet Trump embodies what you might call the Walt Whitman principle of politics: Do I contradict myself?

It’s conceivabl­e that Trump would be willing to make a partial deal with North Korea. I can think of at least two important players who seem to think so. One is Kim Jong-un. It seems almost impossible that he would permanentl­y give up his nuclear capability — his only significan­t bargaining chip with the rest of the world. That way lies the fate of Muammar

Gaddafi or Saddam Hussein. If

Kim is actually hoping to get some sort of an agreement out of

Trump, he must imagine that it’s possible Trump would agree to something less than full denucleari­sation.

The other is

John Bolton,

Trump’s new national security adviser. A wily, experience­d operator like Bolton doesn’t just accidental­ly bring up Libya as an example when discussing the North Korean talks. The best interpreta­tion of his remarks is that Bolton knew perfectly well that North Korea would respond to the Libya comparison by making a fuss and threatenin­g to withdraw from the negotiatio­ns. If Bolton expected that to happen, he must’ve wanted it to happen — because he fears that if the summit takes place, Trump will be tempted to agree to a partial deal so he can declare victory and go to Oslo to pick up his Nobel.

For a hawk like Bolton, the partial-deal scenario is a nightmare. Would it actually be so bad? Gary Samore, who was Obama’s arms-control coordinato­r, thinks otherwise. He argues that it would be valuable if negotiatio­ns led to a test freeze that could be sustained for years and then lead to partial dismantlin­g of existing weapons.

The basic logic of Samore’s view is that other than negotiatio­ns, there is no credible way to pressure Kim. Negotiatio­ns and peace are better than confrontat­ion and war.

This is, of course, the same logic that led to Obama’s Iran deal. If you think that deal made sense, there’s reason to think that a partial deal with North Korea would, too.

The downside of a partial Trump-Kim deal is that it would, in effect, reward Kim for the conduct that brought him onto Trump’s radar screen in the first place: testing nuclear bombs and interconti­nental ballistic missiles. That’s not ideal, because it sends the message to North Korea that the way to get concession­s is to behave aggressive­ly and ramp up fears of war.

The same message is also undesirabl­e when directed to other nuclear powers like Pakistan or near-nuclear powers like Iran. It says that the best way to get concession­s from the US in the Trump era is to make threats, blow things up and then negotiate.

Most significan­t, rewarding Kim sends a broader global message that confrontat­ion and bluster is the way to win any sort of attention and make progress in any negotiatio­n with Trump. What works in nuclear policy can also work in trade policy. After all, confrontat­ion followed by negotiatio­n seems to be Trump’s own impulse, as seen in his trade policy toward China.

When seen in the light of the Iran deal, it might make sense to pursue a similar deal with North Korea. But from a broader perspectiv­e, there’s reason to fear the possibilit­y that Trump would make peace with Kim without extracting meaningful concession­s from him. Just this once, Bolton might be right. — Bloomberg

When both sides are trying to signal that they are dangerous and that their threats are serious, it becomes easy to misunderst­and the other side’s strategy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates