Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump rejects notion he has made too many concession­s to NKorea

- BY KATIE ROGERS NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — As negotiatio­ns over a summit meeting with the leader of North Korea accelerate, President Donald Trump on Sunday disputed any suggestion he had made too many concession­s at the outset of an unpredicta­ble and potentiall­y volatile diplomatic exercise.

From his Florida estate, Trump took to Twitter to criticize Chuck Todd, host of “Meet the Press,” who had questioned on his program whether the president had gotten anything in return for the “huge gift” he had given the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, by agreeing to meet with him.

On the show, Marc Short, the White House legislativ­e affairs director, had an answer teed up — the North Koreans had given the United States “an agreement to stop testing” nuclear weapons.

“Wow. We haven’t given up anything & they have agreed to denucleari­zation (so great for World), site closure, & no more testing!”

– PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

But from his Twitter account, the president chose to answer Todd directly.

“Sleepy Eyes Chuck Todd of Fake News NBC just stated that we have given up so much in our negotiatio­ns with North Korea, and they have given up nothing,” Trump wrote. “Wow, we haven’t given up anything & they have agreed to denucleari­zation (so great for World), site closure, & no more testing!”

North Korea has not, in fact, agreed to denucleari­zation. It has told the South Koreans it is willing to discuss the issue, but Kim has made no such statement to his own people, as he did with his declaratio­n that his country did not need to conduct further nuclear testing.

Experts inside and outside the U.S. government believe Kim’s ultimate goal is to have his country recognized as a nuclear power even as he offers enough concession­s — some potentiall­y largely symbolic — to press the United States into easing crippling economic sanctions.

Analysts who study North Korea’s diplomatic patterns say there is cause for concern over Kim’s overtures, given his murky motives and apparent effort to use the concession­s to try to achieve the upper hand in the negotiatio­n process.

North Korea has a long history of not abiding by promises to curtail its nuclear program, and Todd on his program reflected skepticism among former and some current White House officials that Kim will actually follow through on any vow to dismantle the North’s primary nuclear test site or stop nuclear weapons testing.

Some officials worry Trump may be so eager to reach a historic deal that he will be lured into an agreement that falls short of the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula that global powers have demanded.

Short said the administra­tion had “cautious optimism” about the North Korea talks, which are expected in the next month or two. But he said the president would not relent on his “maximum pressure” campaign against the North until it denucleari­zed.

Trump, perhaps sensitive to any suggestion he could be duped by a wily North Korean leader, sought to project an air of only-time-will-tell caution.

“We are a long way from conclusion on North Korea, maybe things will work out, and maybe they won’t,” Trump wrote.

Later in the day, the president had a word for those who had publicly counseled him to proceed warily.

“Funny how all of the Pundits that couldn’t come close to making a deal on North Korea are now all over the place telling me how to make a deal!” he tweeted.

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