New York Post

Kim summit ‘touch’ & go

Prez: I’ll feel him out fast

- By ANNA SANDERS

President Trump predicted on Saturday that he would know “within the first minute” if North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was taking their Tuesday nuclear summit seriously from “my touch, my feel.”

The president said he had “a clear objective” for the “mission of peace” in Singapore — to persuade Kim to completely abandon his arsenal of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

“I think I’ll know pretty quickly whether or not, in my opinion, something positive will happen,” said Trump, who is known for getting physical with leaders like French President Emmanuel Macron.

The comments came before Trump left the G-7 meeting in Canada to head to Asia.

“If I think it won’t happen, I’m not going to waste my time. I don’t want to waste his time,” Trump said.

He admitted any progress would be “spur of the moment” and characteri­zed the meeting as Kim’s only opportunit­y for a deal with the US.

“He could take that nation with those great people and truly make it great. So it’s . . .a one-time shot, and I think it’s going to work out very well,” Trump said. “That’s why I feel positive, because it makes so much sense.”

Tuesday will mark the firstever meeting between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader, but it was unclear what a nuclear deal with the isolated country would look like.

The US and North Korea have disagreed about what “denucleari­zation” entails. North Korea has used the term to demand the US pull thousands of troops out of South Korea and end its “nuclear umbrella” agreement to protect South Korea, which lacks nukes.

The president previously nicknamed Kim “Little Rocket Man,” while the North Korean leader called Trump a “mentally deranged US dotard.”

Trump canceled the meeting last month, citing “tremendous anger and open hostility” from North Korea. But after North Korea repeated its eagerness to meet, the summit was back on.

The stakes are high, with American authoritie­s warning that North Korea could soon have the ability to strike anywhere in the continenta­l US.

Trump on Saturday doubled down on his promise that the US “will watch over and we’ll protect” Kim and North Korea if they relinquish their nuclear program. He also suggested South Korea, China and Japan would be prepared to help the North’s economy.

“This has not been done before at this level,” Trump said. “This is a leader who really is an unknown personalit­y . . . I think that he’s going to surprise on the upside, very much on the upside.”

Both men were expected to land in Singapore Sunday. They’ll arrive to “summit fever” across the island, with locals selling everything from drinks and tacos to gold medallions to mark Trump’s huddle with the hermit king.

SEOUL — When President Trump tweeted on March 8 that he was willing to meet with Kim Jong-un, many South Koreans were jubilant — including many who didn’t expect much from the summit.

Shin Daeyoung, a 26year-old man who had recently returned to Seoul after earning his BS in biotechnol­ogy from SUNY Buffalo, was among the excited early skeptics.

“Trump might change his mind in one second, just like that,” he said, snapping his fingers, adding that both Kim and Trump “are unpredicta­ble guys. They just don’t care what others think.”

As one of the journalist­s on a recent press tour in South Korea’s capital, I spoke with a cross section of locals — both fans and critics of Trump’s approach — and then reconnecte­d with some of them on the eve of the June 12 summit in Singapore. During the past three months, even many of the initial scoffers have come around to the opinion that we could be witnessing a real turning point in inter-Korean relations — albeit a gradual bend in the road rather than a sharp U-turn.

Difference­s of opinion tend to be generation­al. Some older South Koreans, who still remember how Kim’s father and grandfathe­r used negotiatio­ns to play for time while building up the North’s weapons program, don’t trust the North Korean dictator to play fair. But their children and grandchild­ren tend to be more hopeful that Trump’s devil-may-care negotiatin­g style could spark real change on the Korean peninsula.

Park Hyun-sook, an English-language tour guide in her mid-40s, was among those who initially thought Kim would never give up his nuclear weapons. Reached this week at her home in Seoul, Park said she and her similarly aged friends were now optimistic about the summit. “Perhaps shooting missiles off was part of Kim’s plan,” she said. She even praised Trump’s public letter initially canceling the summit “to make Kim embarrasse­d and nervous.”

Park said her mother-in-law, like many of South Koreans in their 80s, is worried the negotiatio­ns are moving too abruptly and Kim will cheat the United States. Meanwhile, Park’s 20-something niece fears that the North could become an economic drag on the South if the two countries reunify. Although South Korea’s economy is currently booming, job mobility is difficult and youth unemployme­nt is above 10 percent. Morethan 70 percent of young South Koreans said they disapprove­d of reunificat­ion in a recent government-sponsored poll.

Choi Woosuk Kenneth, an editor at the conservati­ve national newspaper Chosun Ilbo, would eventually like to see the two Koreas reunified. As the 54-year-old child of North Korean refugees who fled to the South a few years before the 1950 outbreak of the Korean War, he believes he has cousins in the North he has never met.

Choi, whohas a son currently serving his compulsory military service, pointed out that millions of South Koreans are directly affected by the constant nuclear threat because they have a son or brother in uniform. Hehopes Trump keeps focusing on the denucleari­zation of North Korea with complete, verifiable and irreversib­le dismantlem­ent, commonly abbreviate­d as CVID.

“This is a vital preconditi­on of economic assistance,” he said. “Otherwise, we’re afraid that any aid will be used for the nuclear program.”

Choi said the US role is more central today than it was during negotiatio­ns between the two Koreas a decade or more ago. The South was able to offer economic assistance to the North when the two Koreas met in 2000 and again in 2007. Now tough sanctions make that impossible. “If Kim agrees to CVID with Trump, South Korea is ready to move,” with economic aid to the North, he said. “If Kim does not agree to CVID, it will be the beginning of his end. Whether that means military action or even more sanctions, the regime will not survive.”

When I asked him this week if Trump would deserve a Nobel Peace Prize for successful negotiatio­ns, he agreed — conditiona­lly.

“Just getting a summit in itself is not going to warrant a Nobel Peace Prize. I don’t think it’s that easy to get one,” he said. “But if true CVID follows, that means North Korea is not going back to its nuclear weapons program [and] then of course he deserves a peace prize.”

The world woke up to North Korea’s growing nuclear threat a year ago, when the Hermit Kingdom began rapidly accelerati­ng its missile tests, culminatin­g in the country’s largest undergroun­d explosion to date in September. Pyong- yang claimed to have tested a hydrogen bomb, and a series of aftershock­s persisted for months.

Kim said he destroyed this site as a “goodwill” gesture in May, inviting foreign journalist­s but not technical experts to observe his claim. Chinese scientists estimate that the earthquake­s may have already rendered the tunnels unusable.

But South Koreans have been living under this cloud of fear for generation­s. Seoul is only as far from the demilitari­zed zone as Times Square is from Jones Beach. This point was driven home for me when I met Jung Kyu Sung, a seasoned journalist in his mid-50s. As he flashed his most winning smile at me, he asked what I thought now that North Korea’s nuclear missiles could reach all of the continenta­l United States. (Apoint that is debatable on technical grounds.)

He implied that the US is now in the thick of it with the South Koreans in a way we’ve never been before.

While many South Koreans seemed optimistic, some living in the country are worried about potential repercussi­ons if the summit fails. John Bocskay, a longtime American expatriate who moved to South Korea 20 years ago to teach English, said this concern pervades his South Korean wife and coworkers. “They see both Trump and Kim as being primarily interested in burnishing their own reputation­s and prestige,” Bocskay, 47, said.

He said the Singapore summit felt like the old slogan for the New York Lottery: “Hey, you never know.”

“Though like the lottery,” he added, “I have yet to hear anyone I know express anything like real confidence in a positive outcome.”

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 ??  ?? As the June 12 meeting looms, many South Koreans are feeling hopeful after decades of antagonism with North Korea.
As the June 12 meeting looms, many South Koreans are feeling hopeful after decades of antagonism with North Korea.
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