The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

U.S. envoys explain how to negotiate with North Korea

- By Matthew Pennington The Associated Press

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump’s Singapore summit with Kim Jong Un may be unpreceden­ted, but during a quarter-century of on-off nuclear talks with North Korea, U.S. officials have learned a thing or two about dealing with an inscrutabl­e adversary and have tried many tactics to get their way: quiet persuasion, black humor and even walking out of the room.

Across the table, they’ve faced dogged North Korea negotiator­s who launch into anti-American tirades, reflecting a doctrinair­e mindset and the vast ideologica­l gulf between two nations still technicall­y at war. But they’ve also encountere­d officials who are polite, know their brief inside-out, and occasional­ly flash wit.

As Trump prepares to meet with Kim on Tuesday, there’s uncertaint­y about how the two headstrong leaders will get along and whether the former real estate mogul can extract nuclear concession­s from the young North Korean autocrat. Four former U.S. officials reflect here on their own, often-difficult experience of negotiatin­g with North Korea.

Gone With The Wind

Starting in mid-1993, Robert Gallucci led the U.S. in direct talks with North Korea, seeking to rein in its then-nascent nuclear program. The first meeting took place in New York, on the top floor of the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.

Gallucci, then an assistant secretary of state, recalled that the Americans were taken aback by the sight of a dozen or so North Korean diplomats, each one with a lapel pin with a picture of their supreme leader.

“You can imagine us going into a meeting with lapel pins with Bill Clinton’s picture? It’s just implausibl­e. But that actually goes to something that’s quite important for people to understand,” said Gallucci, describing North Korea as a cult of leadership as much as it is an authoritar­ian government. “And one forgets that at one’s peril. I think you can lose a lot of ground in discussion if you don’t understand how sensitive they are about their leadership.”

To the Americans’ surprise, North Korea’s deputy foreign minister, Kang Sok Ju, during the talks quoted from the epic American civil war novel, “Gone with the Wind.” It wasn’t the line immortaliz­ed by Clark Gable in the Hollywood movie — “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn,” Gallucci said, but rather “something to do with wagons rolling and dogs barking.” After the meeting, he gave Kang a copy of the book as a gift. Gallucci got a box of Korean ginseng tea in return.

Gallucci said the North Korean would use extreme and insulting language about the United States, and he’d push back, but ultimately he wasn’t interested in polemics. “It’s natural that you have this hostility. Having said that, you still want to build what rapport you can in the discussion so that you can reach your objectives.” After nearly a year-a-half, the two sides finalized a framework that halted North Korea’s production of plutonium for bombs in exchange for energy assistance.

Dinner with Kim Jong Il

The closest the U.S. has come in the past to holding a leadership summit with North Korea was in the dying months of the Clinton administra­tion when the North expressed willingnes­s to reach a deal restrictin­g its ballistic missile program. Wendy Sherman was a close aide to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright when she visited Pyongyang in October 2000, exploring that possibilit­y.

As a gift for then-autocrat Kim Jong Il — the current leader’s father — Albright had brought a basketball signed by Michael Jordan after learning that the diminutive Kim was a fan of the NBA.

During negotiatio­ns, the Americans were impressed by Kim’s mastery of missile technicali­ties. At dinner, an aide to Kim was leading constant toasts with soju, the fiery Korean liquor, leaving some of the U.S. delegation worse for wear.

Sherman said the North Korea leader was strangely protective of Albright and herself, who were seated on either side of Kim, several times waving the aide away. The atmosphere around the North leader was constraine­d. “No one is going to disagree with him. No one is going to correct him. What he says, goes,” Sherman said.

When a dancing troupe performed, and one dancer made a mistake, Kim was visibly displeased. “We were quite concerned for that young woman: that she had displeased the leader and that she would pay for it,” Sherman said.

Advice for Trump: “There is no trust between the United States and North Korea, any more than there is between the United States and Iran. There may be some respect or regard for the subject at hand, but no one should stop thinking for a moment about the horrific conditions in North Korea.”

A higher calling

After Clinton left office, hopes for a U.S.-North Korea summit expired as the George W. Bush administra­tion took a tougher line toward Pyongyang. The framework collapsed in 2002 amid U.S. suspicions that North Korea had a clandestin­e uranium enrichment program. In 2006, North Korea conducted the first of its six nuclear test explosions. The Bush administra­tion used sticks, and eventually carrots, to press for progress on denucleari­zation.

Top diplomat for East Asia, Christophe­r Hill, led the U.S. in six-nation talks with the North hosted by China. “You need to be very specific about what you’re trying to get accomplish­ed. And if they (North Koreans) come back and try to take something away that they’ve already agreed to, my approach was to just leave the table,” Hill said. “Sometimes they’d come back and say we have new instructio­ns. And I’d say well that’s too bad because so do I. And I’d leave.”

The talks led to the temporary disabling of the North’s plutonium reactor but ultimately collapsed in a dispute over verificati­on. Hill said there was little personal banter during the protracted negotiatio­ns, but he recounted occasional flashes of humor from the North Koreans. Once when Hill had to take a phone call from then-Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice, he explained to his North Korean counterpar­t that he had to take a break from the negotiatio­ns and answer “to a higher calling.” The North Korean replied, “Well, that’s a good opportunit­y for me to do the same,” whereupon he went to the bathroom.

Pulling out fingernail­s

Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Clinton, has been a frequent interlocut­or with North Korea since the 1990s, visiting eight times, often to seek the release of American detainees and acting in an independen­t capacity. He believes the North may agree to curbs on its nuclear program but won’t abandon it.

“North Koreans are very tough to deal with,” said Richardson. “They don’t think like we do. We think in terms of a compromise, quid pro quo. You do this, we do that. Their idea of negotiatin­g is they’ll give you more time for you to get to their position.”

He said the best way to get results is to let them vent at formal talks, and then try to negotiate at a meal or in a walk outside the meeting, but he worried that Trump’s hip-shooting style could jar with North Koreans.

Richardson himself has used some unconventi­onal tactics, such as when he was in Pyongyang in 1996 negotiatin­g for the release of an American who had been arrested after swimming across the river border from China into North Korea.

“I made a joke. I said, ‘Well, are you treating this man properly? Does he still have his fingernail­s? And the North Koreans looked at me for about 10 seconds. I thought they were going to shoot me,” Richardson said.

But he said they did get that he was joking, and the man was soon released.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? U.S. President Donald Trump, left, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in a meeting with South Korean leader Moon Jae-in.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE U.S. President Donald Trump, left, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in a meeting with South Korean leader Moon Jae-in.

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