Orlando Sentinel

Trump rebuts Bolton, vows Kim ‘protection­s’

President tries to preserve summit after aide’s remarks

- By Noah Bierman Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump disavowed a controvers­ial remark made by his national security adviser, John Bolton, as he appeared increasing­ly eager Thursday to preserve a historic oneon-one meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un scheduled for next month.

Bolton spooked North Korea recently by suggesting Pyongyang follow the path taken by Libya more than a decade ago, when that country abandoned its effort to build nuclear weapons in exchange for economic benefits and warmer relations. Within a few years, Libya’s leader, Moammar Gadhafi, lost his job and his life at the hands of Western-backed rebels.

North Korea threatened this week to back out of the summit, citing Bolton as it accused the U.S. of making unreasonab­le demands for rapid abandonmen­t of its nuclear program.

“The Libyan model isn’t a model that we have at all,” Trump told reporters during a photo session with the visiting secretary general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, Jens Stoltenber­g. “We decimated that country.”

By contrast, Trump promised that if the United States reaches a deal with North Korea, Kim would “be running his country. His country would be very rich.” The president also vowed that Kim would “get protection­s that will be very strong,” a sharp departure from the fiery rhetoric Trump used just months ago. Previous administra­tions have offered economic incentives and pledges not to take hostile action against the North Koreans but have not said they would affirmativ­ely protect the North.

Trump also implied Thursday that China’s president, Xi Jinping, may be trying to influence the North Koreans to take a harder line with the U.S., perhaps in response to U.S. pressure on trade.

Trump’s efforts to soothe Pyongyang highlighte­d his eagerness to get a deal — an emotion that even some of Trump’s aides fear could lead him to give up too much at the negotiatin­g table.

His disavowal of Bolton’s remark could also undermine Trump’s ability to present a unified front for his administra­tion as he prepares to face off with a country that for decades has defied internatio­nal laws and scuttled U.S. efforts to rein in its nuclear program.

“When the president openly disagrees with his national security adviser about the objective of talks, that’s going to encourage North Korean mischief, and it’s going to discourage allies who depend on the United States to be steady,” said Michael J. Green, who served as senior Asia adviser to President George W. Bush during a prior effort to negotiate with North Korea.

John Park, director of the Korea Working Group at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, said Trump was making clear to North Korea that he is focused on the deal above all else. The North Koreans, as they threatened to withdraw this week, also said they felt misled about the extent of joint South Korean-U.S. military exercises. By laying out their concerns in public without withdrawin­g, they were leaving Trump a way to preserve the summit, Park said.

During the impromptu question-and-answer session, Trump returned twice to China’s role, saying the North Koreans began making more provocativ­e statements shortly after a recent meeting between Kim and Xi, the second between the two. China is North Korea’s most important political and economic ally.

“There has been a big difference since they had the second meeting,” Trump said.

 ?? ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? John Bolton, center, spooked North Korea recently by suggesting it follow the path of Libya more than a decade ago when that country abandoned its nuclear weapons effort.
ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG NEWS John Bolton, center, spooked North Korea recently by suggesting it follow the path of Libya more than a decade ago when that country abandoned its nuclear weapons effort.

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