The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Can the ‘dealmaker’ president deliver on North Korea?

- By Catherine Lucey and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON » Weeks before his planned North Korea summit, President Donald Trump is staring down a dealmaker’s worst nightmare: overpromis­ing and under-delivering.

As the Singapore meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un draws near, the president and his allies are growing increasing­ly anxious about how he can score a win on the world stage. While Trump has not suggested he wants to back out, he has struggled to define his objectives for the historic sitdown and last week he drew fresh criticism from his foreign foil.

“I think that Trump imagined he would go into this meeting and be able to have a historic breakthrou­gh with a deal, but it’s clear he’s starting to realize it won’t be as easy as he imagined,” said Jean Lee, director of the North Korea program at the Woodrow Wilson Center and a former Associated Press bureau chief in Pyongyang.

Trump, who has pitched himself as the ultimate negotiator, has focused on ambitious deals as president but has struggled with the fine print. He just hit the pause button on his threatened trade war with China, announcing an agreement to reduce America’s trade deficit with China — but few details. He recently withdrew the U.S. from the internatio­nal Iran-nuclear deal — without outlining a path forward with his allies. And his Middle East peace plan, which he deputized his son-in-law to lead, is months overdue and facing a more skeptical audience than ever.

Supporters stress that sometimes Trump’s ambitious efforts do pay off, as with the massive tax cut bill he signed into law late last year.

Going into the North Korea meeting, senior administra­tion officials say, the president has been almost singularly focused on the pageantry of the summit —including the suspensefu­l roll-out of details. He has not been deeply engaged in briefing materials on North Korea’s nuclear program, said three people with knowledge of the White House efforts. They were not authorized to speak publicly.

Scott Snyder, director of the Program on U.S.-Korea Policy at the Council of Foreign Relations, said there’s a risk that “the ceremony and the historic nature of the meeting be allowed to overshadow the deliverabl­es.”

Driven by gut instinct, Trump rarely dives deep as he prepares to meet with foreign counterpar­ts. For the North Korea meeting, insiders say, he is motivated by the idea of scoring a historic deal and is tickled by suggestion­s he could win a Nobel Peace Prize — especially since Barack Obama won the honor early in his presidency. Trump has maintained publicly that his goal is to see the Korean Peninsula denucleari­zed, and the North has agreed to put its nuclear program on the negotiatin­g table as a condition for the talks. But the two sides are still miles apart on defining what might be mutually acceptable.

Trump will huddle Tuesday at the White House with South Korean President Moon Jae-in to prepare for the June 12 summit. It was Moon’s government that delivered the initial invitation from Kim for a meeting, and South Korea has been pushing the U.S. toward a peaceful resolution to the nuclear crisis.

North Korea threw a wrench in the plans last week, threatenin­g to cancel over concerns about the U.S. push to see the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula. Administra­tion officials viewed the warning as bluster, akin to Trump’s own promise to walk away if Kim isn’t serious about denucleari­zation. Both sides, they said, have a vested interest in a successful meeting.

Trump attempted to assuage Kim’s concerns last week, promising “protection­s” should he abandon his nuclear weapons. But Trump also suggested Kim risks being overthrown and possibly death if the arsenal remains.

Two former Trump administra­tion officials said the high degree of uncertaint­y surroundin­g the talks benefits Kim, who stands to gain the most in the form of internatio­nal legitimacy from a sit-down with Trump.

Concrete gains for Trump would be slower to emerge. Denucleari­zation programs are measured in months, not days, and for North Korea, which has already demonstrat­ed thermonucl­ear capability, it would likely take years to dismantle and verify that it had abandoned its atomic efforts, should it agree to do so.

One official said the priority of the talks in Singapore would be to reach a topline understand­ing with Kim, with details to be fleshed out later.

The best-case scenario, experts said, would mirror the Iran-nuclear agreement that Trump withdrew from earlier this month — securing an end to the North’s atomic program in exchange for a lifting of sanctions. Such an agreement could provide Kim more assurances that his leadership would be secure.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States