The Day

Wishful thinking

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This editorial appeared in the Dallas Morning News. F or the record, we wish President Donald Trump was right about North Korea when he was optimistic about his ability to alter the regime’s nuclear intentions. We also wish he was right when he declared victory after his summit with the regime’s top dog, Kim Jong Un.

But the truth is that Kim isn’t moving his country toward the norms of a civilized nation. And if actions speak louder than words, the Trump administra­tion is now mounting a substantiv­e argument that little has changed on the northern end of the Korean peninsula.

In recent days Trump’s secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, was compelled to cancel a trip to Pyongyang, and this week news broke that talks are at an impasse between the U.S. and North Korea. The sticking point now is that Kim is insisting the United States sign onto officially ending the Korean War before he does anything else to pretend he actually wants to be a responsibl­e world leader.

Of course, the shooting stopped in 1953 with an armistice, but no formal peace treaty was signed to end the Korean War — which means that technicall­y a state of war still exists. That is unnerving to Kim, who is perpetuall­y paranoid that other nations might be able to use the cover of a decades-old conflict to carry out military operations against him.

We don’t want to tell Kim this, but there is no appetite (or political will) in the United States for launching a fresh shooting war in Korea. But there is also no reason to ease the dictator’s worries either, unless he is willing to make a meaningful (and verifiable) concession to lessen the chances of conflict (nuclear or otherwise) between North Korea and any other country in the world.

We’ve long preferred pushing North Korea to grant concession­s on human rights to anything else. By pressuring the North to respect the rights of its people, the United States won’t lose sight of its long-term objectives of spreading human rights. Those objectives place the U.S. on the right side of the moral struggle of our time, and they have the ability to defang and ultimately consign to the ash-heap of history rogue regimes that threaten peace in the world.

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