Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

China, N. Korea, Russia require delicate touch

- Mel Gurtov Mel Gurtov is a professor emeritus of political science at Portland State University. His commentary is syndicated by PeaceVoice.

People in the media are having difficulty in figuring out where Donald Trump’s administra­tion stands on foreign policy issues.

He’s a shape-shifter, and in just the last week he has completely changed his stance on Russia, China, NATO, and Syria — all without blinking, without apology, and without explanatio­n. Frankly, I doubt that he pays attention to these changing views; to him they simply show his “flexibilit­y.”

In the real world of internatio­nal politics, such shifts can’t be dismissed as unremarkab­le.

We’re talking, after all, about serious adversarie­s — Russia, China and North Korea — each of which, if not dealt with carefully and with full understand­ing of the issues in contention, could take steps that lead to war, even nuclear war. The fundamenta­l problem is that the conduct of foreign policy under Donald Trump is amateurish and dangerous, creating the possibilit­y of a catastroph­ic miscalcula­tion.

Consider: The administra­tion must deal with a Russian leader who has ambitions to restore his country’s status as a great power; with a Chinese leader who wants his country to be co-equal with the United States in world affairs; and with a North Korean leader who wants his country to be acknowledg­ed as a nuclear-weapon state and accorded legitimacy and security assurances.

The lesson? They all need to be treated with respect and great delicacy, mindful that each has substantia­l military capability within easy reach of important U.S. allies, not to mention the U.S. itself.

A cardinal rule

So how has the Trump administra­tion dealt with these adversarie­s?

He has adopted all the standard actions typical of U.S.-style crisis management: reprisals, sanctions, warnings, force deployment­s, threats. These actions violate a cardinal rule of diplomacy: Threats will most likely produce a reaction exactly opposite of the one desired. Threats incite nationalis­t fervor, invite counter-threats and obstruct dialogue. Neverthele­ss, Trump has chosen to violate that rule, with the following results:

With Russia the U.S. has issued what amounts to an ultimatum: distance itself from Syria, or at least do not condone Syria’s use of chemical weapons. The Russians, of course, reject an ultimatum and reject the accusation that Syria used chemical weapons. They threaten to retaliate if the US attacks Syria again.

With China the U.S. demands a change in the terms of trade and Chinese pressure on North Korea to reduce or eliminate its nuclear weapons. Otherwise, says Trump, the U.S. will act on its own against the North. China promises nothing other than a joint review of the trade picture. Xi Jinping didn’t even bring a trade expert with him to the meeting with Trump.

As for pressuring Pyongyang, one semi-official Chinese newspaper has mentioned the idea of cutting off North Korea’s fuel supply from China, something China has done before for a short period. On the other (and more convincing) hand, China’s trade with North Korea is up 37 percent this quarter compared with a year ago. Trump sweetens the pot by withdrawin­g his longstandi­ng charge that China is a currency manipulato­r, hoping China will salvage the uncompromi­sing U.S. posture. In his usual childlike way, Trump thinks that Xi’s love of the chocolate cake served at one of their dinners means Xi goes along with Trump’s gunboat diplomacy.

With North Korea, Trump deploys an aircraft carrier strike force off the Korean coast, presumably to warn Pyongyang that some further provocativ­e step might meet with a forceful U.S. response. Dropping a “mother-of-all-bombs” in Afghanista­n is widely believed to send the North Koreans a further warning of U.S. capabiliti­es.

But North Korea threatens nuclear war if attacked, says it can easily destroy U.S. bases in South Korea, warns that it is not another Iraq, Libya or Syria, and carries out yet another missile test (which fails) and huge parade of its missile inventory. A sixth nuclear-weapon test may yet come.

Trump claims that his missile strike on a Syrian military airport was a great success, that his meeting with Xi went beautifull­y and that North Korea and Russia are in great trouble. The reality, of course, is quite different: Trump’s actions have raised the stakes with all three countries without having resolved major issues such as Russia’s meddling in the U.S. elections, defeating ISIS in Syria, reducing tensions with China over the South China Sea or THAAD, or ending the nuclear weapons and ballistic missile buildup by North Korea.

Alternativ­es

If the U.S. objective with Russia, China and North Korea were to avoid war by accident or design and instead create a path to potential conflict resolution, here are some thoughts about what Trump might have done and can still do.

With Russia, why not accept Putin’s proposal (supported by Bashar al-Assad) for an internatio­nal investigat­ion of the chemical warfare claim? If Washington is so convinced of Syria’s responsibi­lity — and if Trump believes Russia might well have known about the attack in advance — the U.S. should welcome an investigat­ion with confidence in the outcome. As for the immediate future, the Trump administra­tion should establish Putin’s strategic interest in protecting Assad and seek ways to substitute for it. Trump might, for example, promise no further missile strikes in exchange for Russia’s assurance that Assad will never again employ chemical warfare and will destroy the chemical stocks he has hidden under internatio­nal inspection. In exchange for ruling out regime change in Syria and removing some sanctions on Russia, Russia would assure the U.S that it would respect safe zones for anti-Assad forces and people.

With China, Trump has already dropped his incorrect accusation that China is a currency manipulato­r. Now he must also drop his linkage of trade relations with Chinese pressure on North Korea. Trump tweeted: “I explained to the President of China that a trade deal with the U.S. will be far better for them if they solve the North Korean problem!” But now he may have come to the realizatio­n that, as with health care, “it’s complicate­d.” In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Trump said: “After listening [to Xi Jinping] for 10 minutes, I realized it’s not so easy. I felt pretty strongly that they had a tremendous power [over] North Korea. … But it’s not what you would think.” No, it isn’t.

Hopefully, Trump will stop trying to bait Xi on trade, re-evaluate North Korea policy and focus on larger issues in U.S.-China relations. Trump now says, once again in direct contrast with previous scorching criticisms of China, that he and Xi “get along really well, I really like being with him.” If so, the administra­tion might take up China’s plea not to rely on sanctions and to resume negotiatio­ns, which its foreign minister suggested China would support in any format.

The U.S. could jump-start the process by withdrawin­g the fleet near Korea to a nonthreate­ning distance. (Doing so would remove another source of China’s upset: the U.S. naval force en route to Korea conducted joint drills with Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force in the East China Sea, in the area of islands disputed by China and Japan.) Trump might challenge Beijing to obtain Kim Jong-un’s agreement to forego new nuclear and missile tests in return for a stop to full deployment of the THAAD antimissil­e system and suspension of future U.S.-South Korea military exercises — in short, test China’s goodwill and North Korean intentions.

With North Korea, it should be obvious to U.S. policymake­rs that showing “resolve” in the Sea of Japan only makes Kim Jongun more determined to show his resolve. South Koreans, including both of the two top presidenti­al candidates, are more worried about a US-initiated war with North Korea, without their being consulted, than about a North Korean attack. (“The safety of South Korea is as important as that of the United States,” the leading candidate, Moon Jaein, said.) Vice President Mike Pence, in South Korea, said “the era of strategic patience is over” and “all options are on the table.” But his bravado, fortunatel­y, did not represent a departure from what the two previous administra­tions have said, which still rejects a diplomatic initiative with North Korea.

The U.S. and North Korea need to get back to the negotiatin­g table with two objectives in mind: First, remove the sources of current tension, as noted above; second, restore the “action-for-action” principle in the 2005 Six Party Talks agreement and reconsider security assurances and economic assistance to North Korea in exchange for verifiable internatio­nal inspection of its nuclear weapons and weapons-related facilities.

Conclusion

Successful conflict management calls for establishi­ng a peaceful way of doing business. That other way includes inducement­s, which may stimulate talks and reciprocal concession­s; use of all three levels of diplomacy — official, nonofficia­l, and people-to-people — and actions on the ground that, by reducing tensions, reverse the momentum for conflict. These actions may pave the way for a process of re-engagement and trust-building. At the very least, “getting to yes” with an adversary takes the use of force off the table.

Force is always available, but is best when rarely used. Let’s hope the national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, and Pence speak for Trump when they say the U.S. wants to deal “peacefully” with North Korea.

But they need a serious plan, not just words for public consumptio­n.

 ?? MASS COMMUNICAT­ION SPECIALIST 3RD CLASS FORD WILLIAMS / U.S. NAVY VIA AP ?? In this image provided by the U.S. Navy, the guided-missile destroyer USS Porter launches a tomahawk land attack missile April 7 in the Mediterran­ean Sea. The target was an airfield in Syria.
MASS COMMUNICAT­ION SPECIALIST 3RD CLASS FORD WILLIAMS / U.S. NAVY VIA AP In this image provided by the U.S. Navy, the guided-missile destroyer USS Porter launches a tomahawk land attack missile April 7 in the Mediterran­ean Sea. The target was an airfield in Syria.

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