Khaleej Times

President Trump has made concession­s, not Kim

- Fareed Zakaria DIPLOMACY IN THE DUMPS

By way of explanatio­n for some of President Trump’s bizarre foreign policy moves, we are often told that he is “unconventi­onal” and that this could well be an asset. It’s certainly true that he doesn’t follow standard operating procedure on almost anything, from getting daily intelligen­ce briefings to staffing the State Department. But his most striking departure from previous presidents has been in his rhetoric. American presidents have tended to weigh their words carefully, believing that they must preserve the credibilit­y of the world’s leading power.

He said Nato was obsolete and then simply affirmed the opposite. China was a currency manipulato­r that was “raping” America, until it wasn’t.

The loose rhetoric and idle threats have often backfired. After Trump was elected, he decided to try to threaten China by musing about recognizin­g Taiwan. The Chinese government called his bluff and froze relations with Washington. Trump had to call President Xi Jinping and eat his words.

But there are situations where such “flexibilit­y” might work. On North Korea, Trump threatened to rain “fire and fury” on the country, only to now welcome a meeting with its leader. Trump’s supporters say this kind of maneuverin­g could well produce a deal that has eluded more convention­al approaches to the problem.

We should all hope that it will. But so far, it’s worth noting that the circus-like atmosphere of Trump’s alternatin­g threats and embraces have obscured a key point: It’s Trump who made the concession, not Kim Jong Un. The American position has long been that until North Korea took some concrete steps toward denucleari­zation, there would be no talks. Until recently, the Trump administra­tion itself insisted that it would not reward the nuclear buildup with negotiatio­ns.

Now, there is a good argument to be flexible on this procedural issue. But we should be aware that, so far, Kim Jong Un seems to be executing a smart strategy brilliantl­y. He embarked on a fast-track buildup, creating a genuine nuclear arsenal with missiles that can deliver the weapons around the world, risking tensions and even his relations with China. With the arsenal built, he is now mending relations with China, reaching out to South Korea and offering to negotiate with Washington.

Trump’s skill here might well be his willingnes­s to totally abandon a past position and endorse a new one. The United States will have to accept something less than its long-declared goal - complete denucleari­zation - and maybe Trump will be able to find a way to sell this.

There is, however, a different kind of tough talk that is more worrying. The administra­tion pushes hard on some issue - trade with South Korea, for example - and then announces a deal, claiming to have won significan­t concession­s. In fact, mostly these have been symbolic concession­s made by allies to allow the administra­tion to save face. South Korea, for example, agreed to raise the number of cars each American auto manufactur­er can sell in the country from 25,000 to 50,000. It’s an easy concession to make. No American company sold even 11,000 cars there last year.

America remains a superpower. Its allies search for ways to accommodat­e it. The Trump administra­tion can keep making outlandish demands, and it will obtain some concession­s because no one wants an open breach with the United States. If Trump says the Europeans have to come up with some changes to the Iran deal, they will try to find a way to do so, because they don’t want to see the deal collapse and the West fall into disarray.

This is not a sign of power but rather the abuse of it. When the George W. Bush administra­tion forced a series of countries to support the Iraq war, this did not signal American strength - it actually sapped that strength. This is a style that goes beyond the presidency. In recent years, America has grown accustomed to all kinds of special treatment. For example, the state of New York has used the power of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency to force foreign banks to pay fines and make settlement­s. It works, but it creates enormous resentment and leads countries like China to search for ways to work outside the system because they believe the existing one grants too much license to the U.S.

The United States has built up its credibilit­y and political capital over the last century. The Trump administra­tion is raiding that trust fund for short-term political advantage, in ways that will permanentl­y deplete it. — Washington Post Writers Group

The United States will have to accept something less than its long-declared goal — complete denucleari­sation — and maybe Trump will be able to find a way to sell this.

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