Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

How Trump got scammed by North Korea

- Steve Chapman Steve Chapman is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. He wrote this for Creators Syndicate.

Donald Trump had a bad week. He went to West Point to make himself look like a strong leader but raised doubts about his health when he struggled drinking water and descending a ramp. His first Supreme Court appointee wrote the opinion in a case upholding gay and transgende­r rights.

The court also struck down Mr. Trump’s effort to deport undocument­ed foreigners brought here as children. His former national security adviser wrote a book painting the world’s most powerful person as an ignorant sleazebag who was guilty of the impeachmen­t charges and more.

Mr. Trump had to reschedule a Tulsa, Okla., rally planned for Juneteenth, but he insisted on holding it the following day — risking lives in a state suffering a surge of the coronaviru­s. New polls showed him trailing Joe Biden by landslide margins.

In any other week, it would be major news that the North Korean government blew up an office building that had been used for meetings with South Korean officials. Ordinarily, Americans might have taken note that, as The New York Times reported, the regime is threatenin­g “to extinguish the fragile detente with a new cycle of bellicose actions and military provocatio­ns.”

Attention would have been riveted by disclosure in John Bolton’s book that Mr. Trump’s get-togethers with Kim Jong Un were not about eliminatin­g North Korea’s nuclear program but merely at making himself look good.

In reference to the first meeting, in Singapore, Mr. Bolton says Mr. Trump told him “he was prepared to sign a substance-free communique, have his press conference to declare victory and then get out of town.” Although Mr. Trump cared little about nukes, making sure that Mr. Kim received an Elton John CD “remained a high priority for several months.”

Mr. Trump has been a failure in many areas, but nowhere else has there been a greater distance between what he claimed to achieve and what he actually did. In his telling, he averted the war that Barack Obama had been on the verge of initiating. “You would, right now, be in a nice, big, fat war in Asia with North Korea if I wasn’t elected president,” he claimed last year, in one of his hallucinat­ory episodes.

At the outset, it was Mr. Trump who sounded ready to launch an attack. In 2017, the Pyongyang regime carried out a successful test of an interconti­nental ballistic missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. The president responded by declaring that if North Korea threatened us, “They will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.” In a speech at the UN, he said, “Rocket Man is on a suicide mission for himself and for his regime.”

But soon Mr. Trump changed his tune. He dispatched CIA Director Mike Pompeo to North Korea, and soon he agreed to travel to Singapore to meet with Mr. Kim. He made this concession even though the CIA, according to NBC News, concluded that “North Korea will not give up its nuclear weapons, but it may be open to allowing a western burger chain to open a franchise in the country.”

In June 2018, his first summit with Mr. Kim yielded a vague joint communique and Mr. Trump’s agreement to suspend joint military exercises with South Korea. But he immediatel­y tweeted, “There is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea.”

In fact, Mr. Kim never gave up a single nuclear weapon. What he did instead was manipulate Mr. Trump with flattery. “He wrote me beautiful letters,” the president gushed in 2019. “We fell in love.”

But their love affair has not kept Mr. Kim from expanding his nuclear arsenal. Nor has he closed any of the reactors that produce weapons fuel. North Korea has gone back to regular missile tests. Last month, Mr. Kim convened his military leaders to announce “new policies for further increasing the nuclear war deterrence of the country,” according to the government.

In short, Mr. Trump held three grand summits with Mr. Kim, bragged about eliminatin­g the nuclear threat, expressed his love for the dictator — and has gotten a big fat nothing. Concludes Mr. Bolton, “We’re now nearly three years into the administra­tion with no visible progress toward getting North Korea to make the strategic decision to stop pursuing deliverabl­e nuclear weapons.”

Mr. Trump is the political equivalent of the lonely guys who get scammed by dating websites promising to connect them with hot Russian women. The promises he got from his heartthrob didn’t pan out. But, hey — he’ll always have those letters.

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