Imperial Valley Press

Ahead of summit with Kim Jong Un, Trump has lots of options

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TOKYO (AP) — When President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meet in Singapore next month, assuming they can stay on track long enough to make it happen, they will have two very different agendas.

Washington has set the bar for the summit extremely high — complete, verifiable, irreversib­le denucleari­zation. Pyongyang, meanwhile, has a pretty tall order of its own: the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, with the preconditi­on that the “hostile policy” of the U.S. toward their country must first end.

For sure, bridging that gap will be quite a feat. Both leaders might well opt instead for a “shiny object summit,” a meeting that is heavier on photo ops and TV-friendly sound bites than on long-term change.

But what if they really go for a deal?

Here are few of the possibilit­ies they might explore:

HANDING SOME OVER

Reports, albeit speculativ­e and anonymousl­y sourced, keep pop- ping up that Kim may be willing to hand over several of his nuclear weapons as a sign of sincerity.

As far as theatrics go, this would be hard to top.

It would be a tangible, dramatic move that could happen very quickly — factors that would certainly appeal to the reality TV show side of Trump. It could even be big enough to earn him a shot at that Nobel Peace Prize he says everyone is talking about.

Outlandish as it sounds, something like this was what national security adviser John Bolton had in mind when he suggested the Libya model as a good example for North Korea to follow. After Libya unilateral­ly decided to give up its fledgling nuclear program in 2003, planeloads of documents, equipment and even centrifuge­s related to the country’s nuclear and missile programs were transporte­d by U.S. military aircraft to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.

But considerin­g the way leader Moammar Gadhafi was deposed and killed several years later, Pyongyang flipped out at Bolton’s suggestion, almost dooming the summit itself. Arms control experts have also noted that, unlike Libya, the North is already a nuclear power.

So the Libya model really doesn’t fit.

There are other problems, too. North Korea is believed to have several dozen nuclear weapons, so handing over a few — spectacula­r as that would be — wouldn’t really solve anything unless a further agreement was made regarding what to do with the rest. At the same time, for the North, it would be a huge and painful concession.

Nuclear weapons are top secret for a reason. Giving up even one would potentiall­y reveal details of design and technology that the North’s military would rather keep to itself.

CAP AND FREEZE

Kim has already promised to stop launching interconti­nental ballistic missiles and conducting nuclear tests. He even made a big show of demolishin­g tunnels at Punggye-ri, the North’s only known undergroun­d testing site. That’s a start.

But North Korea has an- nounced similar moratorium­s before, only to change its mind later. Nothing Kim has done so far is either irreversib­le or particular­ly costly.

And the North hasn’t said anything about launching shorter-range missiles, a big concern for U.S. ally Japan, which hosts numerous U.S. military bases.

So, short of immediate denucleari­zation, the logical next step is for Washington to push for a freeze on production not only of the bombs themselves, but also of missiles and the fissile material — the plutonium and highly enriched uranium — that can be used to make more bombs.

It’s quite likely that even at the highest levels American officials don’t know how big the North’s nuclear arsenal is or where all of its bombs are located.

They will need to verify that right off the bat, which won’t be easy and will involve a lot of cooperatio­n from Kim.

They will also need to work out a way to verify that the North isn’t actively making more, another daunting task that will require monitors on the ground and a lot more transparen­cy than Pyongyang is inclined to be comfortabl­e with.

Washington can’t reasonably expect all that to happen without giving something in return. So there will have to be more give- and- take, more talking, more exercises in developing mutual trust and probably a lot more problems and potential deal- breaking disputes along the way.

And that’s if everything goes well. Which it never has yet.

PHASING THEM OUT

The end game here is Trump’s goal of total denucleari­zation, but with provisions that give North Korea time to comply.

Nuclear physicist Siegfried Hecker and Robert Carlin, two of the top experts on North Korea’s nuclear program and how to negotiate with Pyongyang, teamed up with another researcher, Elliot Serbin, to produce such a plan for the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n at Stanford University.

Their roadmap, released on Monday, lays out three phases over 10 years.

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