Chattanooga Times Free Press

Planning begins for Kim meeting. Will it happen?

- BY MARK LANDLER NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON — A day after President Donald Trump accepted an invitation to meet Kim Jong Un of North Korea, the White House on Friday began planning a high-level diplomatic encounter so risky and seemingly far-fetched some of Trump’s aides believe it will never happen.

The administra­tion already is deliberati­ng over the logistics and location of the meeting, with a senior State Department diplomat noting the most obvious venue is the Peace House, a conference building in the Demilitari­zed Zone between North and South Korea.

But several officials on Friday said the United States still needed to establish direct contact with North Korea to verify the message from Kim that was conveyed by South Korean envoys to Trump on Thursday. They warned that Kim could change his mind or break the promises he had made about halting nuclear and missile tests during talks.

“The United States has made zero concession­s, but North Korea has made some promises,” said the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders. “This meeting won’t take place without concrete actions that match the promises that have been made by North Korea.”

The White House later clarified that Sanders was not adding preconditi­ons to the meeting but merely emphasizin­g the consequenc­es if Kim conducted tests or interfered with joint military exercises between the United States and South Korea scheduled to begin at the end of March.

On Friday night, Trump reiterated on Twitter that “the deal with North Korea is very much in the making” and that it would be, “if completed, a very good one for the World.”

“Time and place to be determined,” he said.

The White House’s muddled message highlighte­d the confusion sowed by Trump’s on-the-spot decision to meet Kim. Having built its North Korea policy on sanctions and threats of military action, the administra­tion must now learn the language of engagement.

It also served as a reminder of how many hurdles lie ahead before Trump’s spontaneou­s decision on Thursday afternoon leads to a meticulous­ly staged meeting between the U.S. president and the dictator who rules the world’s most reclusive country.

“North Korean offers typically come with caveats and asterisks that need to be examined,” said Daniel R. Russel, a former Asia adviser to President Barack Obama. “We all hope that the multiyear pressure campaign has had an effect, but we shouldn’t prematurel­y celebrate.”

At the State Department, where some diplomats quietly applauded Trump’s gamble, there was a fear that more hawkish aides in the White House might throw up further hurdles to the meeting. The White House, they said, has invested more in sanctions and military options than in diplomacy. Officials there have in the past expressed frustratio­n about what they viewed as the Pentagon’s reluctance to provide options for a military strike on the North.

With all the potential traps and internal misgivings, some officials said they believed the chances of a meeting between the two leaders actually happening were less than 50 percent.

Trump’s decision stunned allies and his own advisers, not least Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who was caught unaware while traveling in Africa when the president accepted Kim’s invitation. Tillerson’s lack of involvemen­t in the announceme­nt underscore­d how marginaliz­ed the State Department has become in North Korean policy. The department’s chief negotiator on North Korea, Joseph Yun, resigned from the Foreign Service last week.

Other State Department officials insisted Tillerson had not been singled out; Trump blindsided all his advisers. And the secretary, speaking to reporters in Djibouti, argued Trump’s decision was not the bolt from the blue that it seemed.

“This is something that he’s had on his mind for quite some time, so it was not a surprise in any way,” Tillerson said. “He’s expressed it openly before about his willingnes­s to meet with Kim Jong Un.”

Sanders said the president was in a “great mood” after two momentous days in which he had announced sweeping tariffs on steel and aluminum — fulfilling a cherished campaign promise — and had scrambled the equation on his most pressing foreign policy challenge.

Privately, however, Trump sounded muted rather than buoyant, according to a person familiar with a round of calls he made Thursday evening to solicit feedback about his surprise move. While the president told people he liked the concept of a oncein-a-lifetime breakthrou­gh, the person said, he struck a less boisterous note than he usually does publicly when he places a bet on himself.

 ?? SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENTI­AL OFFICE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Chung Eui-yong, South Korea’s national security adviser, meets with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office on Thursday. During the meeting, Trump threw aside caution and agreed to meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in a daring and risky diplomatic...
SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENTI­AL OFFICE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Chung Eui-yong, South Korea’s national security adviser, meets with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office on Thursday. During the meeting, Trump threw aside caution and agreed to meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in a daring and risky diplomatic...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States