Los Angeles Times

Trump’s chance

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Re “Trump already hands Kim a victory,” analysis, March 10

Does anything really change because President Trump’s acceptance of an invitation to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un gave a “propaganda victory” to Pyongyang?

The fact is that this meeting represents a historic opportunit­y for face-to-face discussion­s to address a major world threat: North Korea’s nuclear weapons.

For decades, under Presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama, the United States has been gamed by North Korea, as we have totally failed to stop the developmen­t of nuclear weapons and the missiles to deliver them. The bureaucrat­ic protocols and diplomacy of the past have not worked.

Maybe it’s time to try the unorthodox, direct approach favored by Trump. Let’s give peace a chance.

Glynn Morris Playa del Rey

Why does our government demonize a country that, during the Korean War, was utterly destroyed? Our Air Force went so far as to bomb dams, taking out the north’s electricit­y supplies and ruining rice crops.

The North Koreans have very good reason to want a deterrent to protect themselves from the United States, which has invaded, intervened and destroyed countries that could not adequately defend themselves. Consider Libya, a country that gave up its nuclear program only to be bombed and its government overthrown with the help of our government.

Joseph Tillotson Redondo Beach

Kim truly is delusional if he thinks meeting with Trump will bring him recognitio­n as a world power.

Some countries with similar leadership may appear to give him what he wants, but the rest of the world will continue to view him as an unstable dictator of a small, impoverish­ed country who has no regard for human life.

Arline George Reseda

Times reporter Barbara Demick believes that since no other sitting United States president has had the intestinal fortitude to attempt an ice-breaking communicat­ion with a particular adversary, it is a “victory” for the other leader.

Is not any attempt to remove the current threat posed by a major war a good action, even though it involves Trump? The meeting between Kim and our president may never take place, but even the possibilit­y of an opening of communicat­ions to end the Korean War deserves to be celebrated.

Bob Curran Hollywood

This one-upmanship between Kim and Trump reminds me of mock world leaders Charlie Chaplin (as Hitler) and Jack Oakie (as Mussolini) battling each other by pumping their barber chairs higher in the 1940 film “The Great Dictator.”

Let’s hope the TrumpKim faceoff turns out to be a comedy as well.

Terry De Wolfe Monterey Park

 ?? Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images ?? IN SEOUL, a TV news report talks about a meeting between Kim Jong Un and President Trump.
Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images IN SEOUL, a TV news report talks about a meeting between Kim Jong Un and President Trump.

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