Albuquerque Journal

Like a showman, Trump suggests DMZ for ‘big event’ with Kim

Many skeptical over N. Korea ditching nukes

- BY MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON — Like a consummate showman, President Donald Trump began rolling the drum Monday for his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, suggesting the “big event” take place in the Demilitari­zed Zone that divides the Koreas. That’s where Kim just met his South Korean counterpar­t.

But Trump said that the Southeast Asian city state of Singapore was also in the running to host what few would have predicted when nuclear tensions were soaring last year — the first face-to-face meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea.

While policy experts, and even his own national security adviser, voice skepticism that North Korea is sincere about giving up its nuclear efforts, Trump sounds like he’s gearing up for a date with history, and clearly wants the backdrop to be just right.

First by Twitter, and then at a press conference in the White House Rose Garden, Trump said he likes the idea of going to the southern side of the demarcatio­n line that separates the Koreas, where South Korean President Moon Jae-in met Kim on Friday.

“If things work out, there’s a great celebratio­n to be had on the site, not in a third-party country,” Trump said.

There’s been much speculatio­n about where Trump and Kim might meet. Countries in Europe and Southeast Asia, in Mongolia and even a ship in internatio­nal waters have all been suggested as possible venues. Monday was the first time that Trump had publicly named potential locations.

His planned meeting with Kim will be the crucial follow-up to the summit between Kim and Moon on Friday where they pledged to seek a formal end this year to the Korean War — a conflict that was halted in 1953 by an armistice and not a peace treaty, leaving the two sides technicall­y at war. They also committed to ridding the peninsula of nuclear weapons.

Former reality television star Trump now has to help turn the Korean leaders’ bold but vague vision for peace into reality. Undaunted, he gave the impression Monday that government­s were vying to host his face-to-face with Kim and share in the attention it would bring.

“Everybody wants us. It has the chance to be a big event,” the president said on a bright spring day in Washington, alongside Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, whom he’d just met at the White House. “The United States has never been closer to potentiall­y have something happen with respect to the Korean Peninsula that can get rid of the nuclear weapons, can create so many good things, so many positive things, and peace and security for the world.”

It wasn’t clear whether his enthusiasm was stirred by the South Korean president’s suggestion Monday that Trump could take the Nobel Peace Prize if the two Koreas win peace. Moon’s remark came when he deflected a question about whether he might win the award as one of his predecesso­rs, Kim Dae-jung, did in 2000 after the first ever inter-Korean summit.

The United States has reached aid-for-disarmamen­t deals with North Korea before, but they’ve ultimately failed. The most enduring effort negotiated by the Bill Clinton administra­tion in 1994 halted the North’s production of plutonium for nearly a decade. But it collapsed over suspicions that North Korea had a secret program to enrich uranium, giving it an alternativ­e route to make fissile material for bombs.

Trump’s recently installed national security adviser, John Bolton, who has in the past advocated military action against North Korea, reacted coolly Sunday to its reported willingnes­s to give up nuclear programs if the United States commits to a formal end to the war and a pledges not to attack.

“We’ve heard this before,” Bolton told CBS’ “Face the Nation,” adding that the U.S. wanted to see concrete action “not just rhetoric.”

 ?? HWANG KWANG-MO/YONHAP ?? Four North Korean soldiers, center far, and four South Korean soldiers, right and left, stand at the border village of Panmunjom in the Demilitari­zed Zone, South Korea, on Thursday.
HWANG KWANG-MO/YONHAP Four North Korean soldiers, center far, and four South Korean soldiers, right and left, stand at the border village of Panmunjom in the Demilitari­zed Zone, South Korea, on Thursday.

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