Baltimore Sun Sunday

Trump aims to drum up new Kim meeting drama

But aides warn that the sequel may not equal the original

- By Catherine Lucey and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — As President Donald Trump prepares to meet North Korea’s Kim Jong Un for a second time, he’s out to replicate the suspensefu­l buildup, make-or-break stakes and far-flung rendezvous of their first encounter. The president will soon learn if the sequel, on this matter and many others, can compete with the original.

In his third year in office, Trump is starting to air some reruns.

Besides fresh negotiatio­ns with North Korea, Trump is still pushing for his long-promised U.S.Mexico border wall and is considerin­g a new round of tax cuts. The focus on his greatest hits, in part, reflects Trump’s desire to fulfill campaign promises and energize voters for his 2020 re-election campaign.

But it’s not without risks. “The danger is the public starts recognizin­g this is Groundhog Day,” said presidenti­al historian Douglas Brinkley. “You keep thinking there is a win and there is no win. It’s not clear Trump is scoring durable history points.”

With his reality TV background and instinctiv­e sense of how to control a news cycle, Trump has long micromanag­ed the staging of his image, eager to project power and drama.

In his dealings with North Korea, both past and future, Trump has been intent on ginning up excitement.

After months of trading escalating nuclear threats with the North, Trump memorably popped his head into the White House briefing room last March to hint at big news to come. Not long afterward, officials announced that a TrumpKim meeting was in the offing.

From there, Trump teased dates and locations, threatened to cancel it — and did so at one point — before signing off on the plan for the historic meeting in Singapore last June.

Trump was delighted that the first summit received round-the-clock cable TV coverage for days, something he had hoped to repeat last summer when he met with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, according to two Republican­s close to the White House not authorized to speak publicly about private matters. But Trump saw the Putin coverage take a negative turn after he refused to side with U.S. intelligen­ce agencies over the Russian president in a post-summit news conference.

This time, Trump has again tried to draw out the suspense, teasing the possibilit­y of another meeting with Kim for months and waxing poetic about his relationsh­ip with the authoritar­ian leader. But Trump has glossed over the fact that the first meeting produced little in the way of tangible progress toward denucleari­zation. Instead, he’s stressing that North Korea’s threats have fallen off and suggesting there is an opportunit­y for further progress.

Aides counseled the president that a second summit would probably not carry the same drama as the first, and needed more concrete results, but Trump urged them to push forward before deciding to announce it during this past week’s State of the Union address. He insisted to advisers that the Vietnam summit would still be must-see TV, and told one confidant that the idea of “good vs. evil” would be irresistib­le.

The second summit will be Feb. 27-28 in Hanoi, Vietnam.

Brinkley noted there is precedent for requiring more than one summit to make a deal, citing the repeated arms control meetings between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

But he argued that those were a better investment, given that “Russia is a great power” while “North Korea is a rogue actor.”

As for other White House sequels, Trump would be happy to produce Tax Cut 2.0.

He oversaw a massive tax cut at the end of 2017 and teased the possibilit­y of another in the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections.

Economic adviser Larry Kudlow pushed back on the suggestion that it was simply a pre-election ploy as he spoke to reporters at the White House last week.

“We’re kicking it around,” Kudlow said. “We’re looking at a couple of very interestin­g things that may wind up surprising folks.”

You can also count on Trump to continue the tough immigratio­n rhetoric that defined his campaign and became a central part of his midterm election push. He forced the government into a 35-day partial shutdown over his demand to fund a wall along the southern border and views his immigratio­n efforts as key to his re-election campaign.

Brinkley said of Trump’s repeat performanc­es: “He’s a child of the 1970s with boxing matches. It’s like the rematch with Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP 2018 ?? President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un for the second time later this month in Vietnam. The meeting, however, comes with risks.
EVAN VUCCI/AP 2018 President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un for the second time later this month in Vietnam. The meeting, however, comes with risks.

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