The Chronicle

Just the two of us

Trump and Kim ditch aides to talk alone at historic summit

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AS the world waited, Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un sat by themselves for the better part of an hour, alone but for a pair of interprete­rs who became the sole witnesses to history’s first face-to-face conversati­on between an American president and a North Korean leader.

The scores of aides, bodyguards and diplomats who accompanie­d the leaders from Washington and Pyongyang waited elsewhere for the roughly 40-minute one-onone meeting in Singapore. To some national security veterans, it raised concerns about the risk of holding such a monumental meeting solo.

If there was any tension between Mr Trump and Mr Kim, they did not show it as they emerged from their seclusion and proceeded to a second meeting and working lunch – this time joined by a larger coterie of aides.

“Very, very good,” Mr Trump told a waiting cadre of reporters, adding that the two were forging an “excellent relationsh­ip”.

Still, word that the two planned a private tete-a-tete had unleashed a torrent of criticism on social media even before the summit began.

After all, having aides present in high-stakes meetings – especially ones with adversarie­s like the leader of North Korea – provides a president with a modicum of protection, ensuring there are staffers on hand to take accurate notes.

Absent a detailed historical record and corroborat­ing witnesses, the president’s interlocut­or could potentiall­y leave the meeting and misreprese­nt what transpired, creating a he-said-he-said showdown that could turn into a major headache for the US leader.

“Bad idea,” tweeted Paul Haenle, a former China director at the White House National Security Council in the Obama and George W. Bush administra­tions. “I could see Trump giving up a lot for very little in return.”

Barry McCaffrey, a retired US Army general, called the one-on-one meeting an “unacceptab­le danger to US national security”.

He took to Twitter to say that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defence Secretary Jim Mattis should oppose the meeting “in writing”.

“NSC should have TRANSCRIPT of all interactio­ns with brutal, nuclear armed dictator,” Mr McCaffrey wrote, referring to the National Security Council. At stake, he said: “America’s security.”

Yet despite the apprehensi­on, there is establishe­d precedent for presidents meeting privately with foreign leaders – including foes – with only interprete­rs as witness.

Former President Barack Obama was known to occasional­ly hold impromptu chats with leaders on the sidelines of major global summits with only their interprete­rs at their sides.

At former US president Ronald Reagan’s first meeting with then-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, in November 1985, the two men met alone with only trusted interprete­rs for an hour.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un shakes hands with US President Donald Trump at the start of their historic summit in Singapore yesterday.
Picture: AFP North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un shakes hands with US President Donald Trump at the start of their historic summit in Singapore yesterday.

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