The Korea Times

Does Kim need Trump?

- Donald Kirk (www.donaldkirk.com) has been covering the ups and downs of the South-North confrontat­ion for decades. Donald Kirk

U.S. President Donald Trump is facing such excruciati­ng trouble on his own home front that you have to wonder when he’s going to get enough time off to see Kim Jong-un. For that matter, you wonder if Kim will really want to see him all that much, knowing that he’s besieged by enemies and may not even survive the remaining two years of his presidency, much less get elected to a second term.

Still, we have to believe President Moon Jae-in has reason to be confident that a second Trump-Kim summit is absolutely going to happen. He really sounded sure of himself when he said, at that New Year press conference last week, that “Kim’s visit to China shows a second summit between the United States and North Korea is nearing.” He also seemed to know pretty much what would be on the agenda.

The Trump-Kim summit in Singapore “was not specific enough,” Moon said, understati­ng the vacuity of their joint statement in which they both professed to espouse “denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.” That statement was so vague as to be comparable to a declaratio­n of faith in the virtues of the Almighty and motherhood — “Almighty” a carefully chosen, non-controvers­ial reference neither to the Christian God nor Lord Buddha nor Allah but to the supreme being of any religion.

“I am sure they will come out with a concrete agreement,” was the English interpreta­tion of his words in Korean that I heard over the simultaneo­us interpreti­ng device that correspond­ents were given for the question-and-answer session in the Blue House.

I would have loved to have asked President Moon how he could be so sure, whether he had talked to Trump or one of his top-most people, maybe Secretary of State Mike Pompeo or the national security adviser, John Bolton, but no luck. Amid all the hands raised to ask questions, I had no chance.

If the reason for Moon’s confidence in a second summit was not altogether clear, he seemed fully attuned to the skepticism in the U.S. about any understand­ing with Kim.

“There has been distrust and hostility between the U.S. and North Korea,” said Moon, clearly aware the Americans don’t take a “positive” view of any end-of-war declaratio­n. He refused, however, to see it as a precursor to demands for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from the South. “Whether to maintain the U.S. forces is to be determined by the U.S. and South Korea,” he declared.

Fine, but missing from Moon’s remarks was one major considerat­ion about which no one asked. What if Trump’s wings are clipped in the ruckus in Washington over his stubborn bid to get the Congress to approve more than $5 billion to build a wall for the sole purpose of excluding a flood of illegal immigrants from pouring over the southern U.S. border?

Or what if the U.S. government is still virtually shut down, payrolls suspended, normal duties in limbo, while the House of Representa­tives, now dominated by Democrats dedicated to chase the Republican Trump out of the White Houses, refuses to authorize funding?

It’s hard to imagine Trump gallivanti­ng off to see Kim as long as this crisis goes on. Moreover, the crisis may be getting stronger even if he gets his way on funding for “The Wall.” Powerful House committees are gearing to pick up whatever they can find that would show he had compromise­d American interests in his dealings with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.

That investigat­ion may consume the remainder of Trump’s presidency. The House could actually vote to impeach him. Then, if enough members of Trump’s own party in the Republican-controlled Senate were to join the Senate’s Democratic minority in finding him guilty as charged in the impeachmen­t, he’d be gone, ousted, the first president to be kicked out so unceremoni­ously.

Trump could still serve Kim’s purposes if he decides on further cutbacks in the number of U.S. troops here, now 28,500, while going along with that end-of-war or peace declaratio­n.

Kim should know though, that Trump, when they meet, may be more than a lame duck. He could be a wounded wild animal, screaming madly, pathetical­ly, at the media, lying and denying, protesting too much against the slights and slurs of his enemies. A sad sight to imagine.

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