The Palm Beach Post

North Korea, hostages, and Trump’s continued bragging

- Kathleen Parker She writes for the Washington Post.

There he was, the president of the United States, greeting the three American hostages who had just stepped back on U.S. soil after being released by North Korea, and Donald Trump couldn’t help himself.

“It’s very early in the morning,” he noted to reporters. “I think you probably broke the alltime-in-history television rating for 3 o’clock in the morning.”

Of course, he did.

The freed hostages, who had spent from one to three years in labor camps, must have felt like they had landed on Pluto. Still, they seemed happy. They were free, after all. And, big bonus: Melania was there, too.

Living in North Korea isn’t exactly a vacation, but you wouldn’t know that from listening to Trump. A month ahead of his summit with Kim Jong Un, Trump lauded the North Korean leader for his generosity, hospitalit­y and awesome niceness.

“And he was nice in letting them go before the meeting,” said Trump. “I mean, frankly, we didn’t think this was going to happen, and it did.”

And do we wonder why it happened? When it comes to unstable dictators seeking attention and approval from an unstable president, who can claim to divine motivation­s or predict outcomes? History isn’t of much help with Kim, nor are assurances, or the lack thereof, from North Korean officials.

Do we really believe that Kim will give up his nukes? Bonnie Glaser at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies has said that the North Koreans “have still said nothing to indicate that they are willing to give up their nuclear weapons.”

Whatever happens before or after this historic summit, it’s the first between a current North Korean leader and a sitting U.S. president. Trump legitimate­ly, if potentiall­y briefly, gets to enjoy this anticipate­d breakthrou­gh as a seminal event in his administra­tion. After last year’s contest of crazy talk between these two showboater­s, Trump can rightfully boast that his tough rhetoric and intense pressure helped lead to the also-historic recent meeting between North and South Korea.

North Korea rejects any such notions. In a toast to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during his visit to Pyongyang, the director of North Korea’s United Front Department said, “We have perfected our nuclear capability. It is our policy to concentrat­e all efforts into economic progress.

... This is not the result of sanctions that have been imposed from outside.”

Trump, meanwhile, has bragged that he had done what Obama couldn’t in getting the hostages released. Then again, it’s hard to release someone who hasn’t been taken hostage yet. Two were arrested after Obama’s watch — you know, on Trump’s.

If Kim does want to join the civilized world, restore his economy, feed his people and make nice — and if Trump succeeds in effectivel­y securing peace in the region — then he will deserve one of the biggest nonmilitar­y parades any century has seen. The media will fill the streets with champagne and shatter the sky with air horns, while thousands of women converge on the Mall to toss their pink kitty hats into a bonfire that will burn until 3 o’clock in the morning.

Then, and only then, Trump will have earned the peace prize — and more. And he can stand before the world and proudly proclaim that he has finally reached his goal. No one will ever surpass his ratings on this day, on this night, ever.

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