Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Reason to mistrust N. Korea

- Cal Thomas is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.

Before meeting with North Korea’s “very honorable” (Trump’s words) dictator, Kim Jong Un, the president should bone up on the history of that country’s duplicity and deception, including ways it has used the wishful thinking of some past U.S. presidents to achieve its objectives.

A good place to start is an essay written by Joshua Muravchik of the American Enterprise Institute for the March 2003 issue of Commentary magazine.

As Muravchik notes, North Korea’s nuclear program isn’t a recent developmen­t. It began in 1979, and since then, its leaders have played the West, and especially the U.S., like a Stradivari­us.

In 1989, Pyongyang claimed it would agree the entire Korean Peninsula become a nuclear-free zone (sound familiar?). Instead, after raising hopes in the George H.W. Bush administra­tion, it began requiring conditions and incredibly won concession after concession, sending a message that the U.S. could be had.

In January 1992, North and South Korea reached an agreement to prohibit nuclear weapons from the peninsula, but North Korea refused to sign a “safeguards” agreement, and then said it would have to submit the deal to its legislatur­e, a process that would deliberate­ly take several months. More agreements, re-designatio­ns of nuclear plants into something they were not and more deception followed.

During the Clinton administra­tion, writes Muravchik, inspection­s were placed on the “back burner,” prompting a U.S. State Department official to tell The Washington Post the administra­tion’s strategy was to “walk softly and carry a big carrot.”

Even Clinton’s defense secretary, William Perry, had qualms about the credibilit­y of any North Korean promises. Perry told The New York Times: “I’d rather (face the risk of war) than face the risk of even greater catastroph­e two or three years from now.” When Secretary of State Warren Christophe­r said the U.S. was willing to negotiate with Pyongyang, Perry’s comment seemed null and void.

Enter Jimmy Carter, who flew to Pyongyang in 1994 for a faceto-face with Kim Il Sung, the current dictator’s grandfathe­r. Carter saw a capital he said reminded him of the “Wal-Mart in Americus, Georgia.” The neon lights looked to him like “Times Square.” He said he encountere­d a population that was “friendly and open.”

No wonder North Korea has believed the U.S. to be a patsy ever since.

Fifteen years ago, Muravchik said the U.S. had “no choice” but to “think” about war against the North.” He said better to do it now than later, when the costs would be even higher. It is now later. It may also be too late should Kim Jong Un have nuclear weapons and ICBMs capable of hitting U.S. targets.

President Trump may be used to doing “deals” with New York developers and politician­s, but compared to what he faces should he meet with Kim, he’s seen nothing yet. It is like a novice poker player taking on Las Vegas high-rollers. The profession­als see the amateur walk in and they think to themselves, “We can easily roll this guy.”

Watch how you play your cards, Mr. President. In case you haven’t noticed, the other side cheats.

 ?? Cal Thomas ??
Cal Thomas

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