The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Kim sees U.S. handouts as threat

- By Eric Talmadge Eric Talmadge has been the AP’s Pyongyang bureau chief since 2013.

TOKYO » The U.S.-North Korea summit appears to be back on track, but Pyongyang is showing increased impatience at comments coming out of Washington that what leader Kim Jong Un really wants, even more than his nuclear security blanket, is American-style prosperity.

It’s a core issue for Kim and a message President Donald Trump shouldn’t ignore as they work to nail down their summit next month in Singapore.

Kim is as enthusiast­ic as Trump to see the summit happen as soon as possible, but the claim that his sudden switch to diplomacy over the past several months shows he is aching for U.S. economic aid and privatesec­tor know-how presents a major problem for the North Korean leader, who can’t be seen as going into the summit with his hat in his hand.

The claim is also quite possibly off target.

North Korea is far more interested in improving trade with China, its economic lifeline, and with South Korea, which it sees as a potential gold mine for tourism and largescale joint projects. Getting the U.S. to back off sanctions so he can pursue those goals, along with the boost to his legitimacy and whatever security guarantees he can take home, is more likely foremost on Kim’s mind.

Even so, the North’s perceived thirst for U.S. economic aid has consistent­ly been the message coming from Trump and his senior officials. All Kim needs to do, they suggest, is commit to denucleari­zation and American entreprene­urs will be ready to unleash their miracles on the country’s sad-sack economy.

“I truly believe North Korea has brilliant potential and will be a great economic and financial nation one day,” Trump tweeted Sunday. “Kim Jong Un agrees with me on this.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has laid Washington’s road map out in more detail.

“We can create conditions for real economic prosperity for the North Korean people that will rival that of the South,” he said earlier this month in a televised interview. “It won’t be U.S. taxpayers. It will be American know-how, knowledge, entreprene­urs and risk-takers working alongside the North Korean people to create a robust economy for their people.”

Pompeo suggested that Americans help build out the North’s energy grid, develop its infrastruc­ture and deliver the finest agricultur­al equipment and technology “so they can eat meat and have healthy lives.”

Kim has emphatical­ly not agreed to any of that.

Under Trump’s “maximum pressure” policy, internatio­nal sanctions on North Korea are stronger than ever. Sanctions relief would open the door for more trade with China, South Korea and possibly Russia — partners North Korea trusts more than it trusts Washington — and potentiall­y unlock access to global financial institutio­ns.

The last thing Kim wants is to give up his nuclear weapons only to have his country overrun with American businessme­n and entreprene­urs.

To Pyongyang’s ears, that scenario is less an offer than a threat.

Despite its very real need for foreign investment, Kim’s regime has good reason to be wary of economic aid in general. Opening up to aid inevitably involves some degree of increased contact with potentiall­y disruptive outsiders, calls for change, loosening of controls and restrictio­ns — all of which could be seen as a threat to Kim’s near absolute authority.

North Korea’s message on that has been clear.

Almost as soon as Pompeo started talking about his plan to rebuild North Korea’s economy, Kim Kye Gwan, the North’s first vice foreign minister, shot back that Pyongyang has no interest in that kind of help, saying, “We have never had any expectatio­n of U.S. support in carrying out our economic constructi­on and will not at all make such a deal in future, too.”

State media unleashed another attack on the idea Sunday, calling Fox News, CBS and CNN “hack media on the payroll of power” for airing programs that featured U.S. officials talking about how large-scale, nongovernm­ental economic aid awaits North Korea if it moves toward verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation.

The North’s media have been careful not to criticize Trump directly.

But the issue is sensitive enough that the North has also stepped up its response in ideologica­l terms, stressing the superiorit­y of the socialist system and the value of independen­ce, while warning against the underhande­d scheming of the “imperialis­ts,” which in North Korea speak is interchang­eable with “Americans.”

“It is the calculatio­n of the imperialis­ts that they can attain their aims without firing a single shot if they make the people degenerate and disintegra­te ideologica­lly and foment social disorder,” said an editorial Sunday in the ruling party’s newspaper.

The commentary went on to call the capitalist way of life “ideologica­l and cultural poisoning” and concluded, “Unless such poisoning is prevented, it would be impossible to defend independen­ce and socialism and achieve the independen­t developmen­t of each country and nation.”

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