The Palm Beach Post

President casts summit as ‘one-time shot’ for Kim

Trump looks to convince N. Korean head to ditch nukes.

- By Catherine Lucey and Zeke Miller

SINGAPORE — President Donald Trump cast his Tuesday summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un as a “one-time shot” for the autocratic leader to ditch his nuclear weapons and enter the community of nations, saying he would know within moments if Kim is serious about the talks.

The president said Saturday he was embarking on a “mission of peace,” as he departed the Group of Seven meeting in Canada to fly to the summit site in Singapore. Saying he has a “clear objective in mind” to convince Kim to abandon his nuclear program in exchange for unspecifie­d “protection­s” from the U.S., Trump acknowledg­ed that the direction of the highstakes meeting is unpredicta­ble, adding it “will always be spur of the moment.”

“It’s unknown territory in the truest sense, but I really feel confident,” he told reporters. “I feel that Kim Jong Un wants to do something great for his people and he has that opportunit­y and he won’t have that opportunit­y again.”

“It’s a one-time shot and I think it’s going to work out very well,” he said.

Raising expectatio­ns in advance of the meeting, Trump said the outcome will rely heavily on his own instincts. The U.S. president, who prides himself on his deal-making prowess, said he will know “within the first minute” of meeting Kim whether the North Korean leader is serious about the nuclear negotiatio­ns.

“I think I’ll know pretty quickly whether or not, in my opinion, something positive will happen. And if I think it won’t happen, I’m not going to waste my time. I don’t want to waste his time,” Trump said.

“This is a leader who really is an unknown personalit­y,” Trump added of Kim. “People don’t know much about him. I think that he’s going to surprise on the upside, very much on the upside.”

The Kim sit-down comes as Trump’s internatio­nal negotiatin­g skills have faced their toughest tests to date with mixed results. Tensions flared at the G-7 summit between Trump and U.S. allies over his protection­ist economic policies and decisions to exit the Iran nuclear deal and Paris climate accord.

Trump rated his relationsh­ips with U.S. partners as “a 10,” though erstwhile allies spent much of the weekend directly challengin­g Trump’s policy positions.

As he looks to the Kim meeting, Trump is taking a high-stakes risk in hopes of containing the increasing­ly challengin­g national security threats from North Korea’s advanced nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Seeing Nobel Peace Prize laurels and eyeing potential to show up his critics at home and abroad, Trump is granting Kim the internatio­nal legitimacy he’s long sought in hopes of securing a legacy-defining accord.

“He could take that nation with those great people and truly make it great,” Trump said. “That’s why I feel positive, because it makes so much sense.”

Trump also praised the North Koreans, saying they have been “really working very well with us” during preparatio­ns for the summit, even though Trump had canceled the summit last month following a recent period of what he called “tremendous anger and open hostility” from the North Korean government. But then Trump did a quick pivot, signaling almost immediatel­y after scrapping the meeting that he was open to going ahead with it after all.

Delegation­s from both countries then launched into a frenetic period of negotiatio­ns that are expected to culminate with Tuesday’s meeting.

“So far, so good. We’re going to have to see what happens. I very much look forward to it,” Trump said.

Still, questions remain about what a deal on the North’s nuclear weapons could look like.

Trump has said he believes Kim would agree to denucleari­zation — and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Thursday he had received Kim’s personal assurances to that effect — but the two countries have offered differing visions of what that would entail. Despite Kim’s apparent eagerness for a summit with Trump, there are doubts that he would fully relinquish his nuclear arsenal, which he may see as his guarantee of survival.

U.S. defense and intelligen­ce officials have assessed the North to be on the threshold of having the capability to strike anywhere in the continenta­l U.S. with a nuclear-tipped missile — a capacity that Trump and other U.S. officials have said they would not tolerate.

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