Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump: Delayed summit?

North Korea has been piling on preconditi­ons

- Gregory Korte

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump cast new uncertaint­y Tuesday on his planned summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, saying the June 12 date could slide back on the calendar — or it may not happen at all.

“There’s a chance — there’s a very substantia­l chance — it won’t work out,” Trump said, striking a more doubtful tone about the summit than he has since he agreed to it two months ago.

“You never know about deals,” he said. “I’ve made a lot of deals. You never really know.”

That assessment came as Trump met Tuesday with South Korean President Moon Jaein at the White House. The two leaders were scheduled to plot strategy for what would be a historic summit with North Korea next month in Singapore — but now appeared to be looking at an increasing likelihood that the summit won’t happen.

“I think the summit’s dead,” said Harry Kazianis of the Center for the National Interest. “And I think the reason it’s dead is, quite frankly, that the two sides are too far apart.”

No sooner was a day and place set for the summit than the assumption­s underpinni­ng the meeting began to erode. Trump had agreed to meet with Kim based on South Korea’s representa­tions that North Korea would agree to the talks without preconditi­ons.

But in recent weeks, North Korea has ramped up its rhetoric, insisting that the United States and South Korea end joint military exercises and suggesting it doesn’t want to give up its nuclear weapons after all.

Trump attributed that change in tone to Kim’s second visit to China on May 8, when he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping. “I will say this: There was a somewhat different attitude after that meeting. Maybe nothing happened. I’m not blaming anybody,” he said. “I can’t say I’m happy about it.”

As he’s attempted to force North Korea to the negotiatin­g table, Trump has relied on a “maximum pressure” strategy that counts on China’s willingnes­s to enforce internatio­nal sanctions on the country. China is the regime’s largest trading partner.

But Trump has also been navigating his own delicate trade negotiatio­ns with China, even agreeing to reconsider penalties against Chinese telecom company ZTE for violating the North Korean sanctions. “I think that President Xi is a world class poker player,” Trump said.

Moon said Tuesday he knows there are “very many skeptical views” about whether the summit will succeed, but said this time could be different.

“This will be the first time there will be an agreement among the leaders,” he said.

But Moon’s own national security adviser, Chung Eui-yong, told reporters on his way to Washington that South Korea was making contingenc­y plans in case the summit doesn’t pan out.

“We believe there is a 99.9 percent chance the North Korea-U.S. summit will be held as scheduled,” Chung said, according to the Yonhap news agency. “But we’re just preparing for many different possibilit­ies.”

It was Chung who first cracked an opening to North Korea, using shuttle diplomacy to deliver a message to the White House from Pyongyang in March. He told Trump that Kim was willing to meet without preconditi­ons, and Trump immediatel­y agreed.

“This has always been a Hail Mary,” he said. “But we all forgot something: North Korea will always be North Korea. They will never agree to give up their nuclear weapons.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in meet Tuesday at the White House to plot strategy for a historic summit with North Korea.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in meet Tuesday at the White House to plot strategy for a historic summit with North Korea.

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