Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

North Korea is acting up because Trump has it cornered

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NWASHINGTO­N orth Korea’s recent temper tantrum over U.S.-South Korean military exercises and its threat to pull out of its upcoming summit with President Donald Trump are signs that Mr. Trump’s North Korea strategy is working.

Over the past several months, Mr. Trump has boxed in Kim Jong Un. First, he ramped up economic pressure on Pyongyang while making clear that, unlike his predecesso­rs, he was willing to take military action. Yet when Mr. Kim offered to meet face-to-face, Mr. Trump shocked everyone (probably including Mr. Kim) by reportedly accepting on the spot. Instead of rejecting the offer, or using it as a bargaining chip to elicit concession­s, Mr. Trump said “yes” and put the two nations on a faster track to nuclear negotiatio­ns than anyone had anticipate­d.

Then, the president began shaping the parameters of an agreement — starting with making clear what kind of deal he would not cut. The North Koreans want a nuclear deal like the one President Barack Obama gave to Iran: sanctions relief up front, billions of dollars in cash, a weak inspection regime and sunset clauses on the back end. By withdrawin­g from the Iran deal last week, Mr. Trump sent Pyongyang a crystalcle­ar message: I don’t cut deals like that.

He then used his senior officials to lay out the parameters of the kind of accord he would cut. Mr. Kim wants to get paid for the promise of denucleari­zation. Appearing on “Face the Nation,” national security adviser John Bolton played the bad cop and explained that that is not happening. Mr. Trump will pay only for actual denucleari­zation. The president, Mr. Bolton said, is looking for “a manifestat­ion of the strategic decision to give up nuclear weapons [that] doesn’t have to be the same as Libya but it’s got to be something concrete and tangible. It may be that Kim Jong Un has some ideas and we should hear him out.”

While Mr. Bolton set expectatio­ns for denucleari­zation, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo played the good cop and held out the twin carrots of security and prosperity if Mr. Kim agrees. “If North Korea takes bold action to quickly denucleari­ze,” Mr. Pompeo said, “the United States is prepared to work with North Korea to achieve prosperity on par with our South Korean friends.” That stunning offer is deeply destabiliz­ing for Mr. Kim. If he goes to a summit with Mr. Trump and refuses to accept a deal that provides his country with prosperity on par with South Korea, then he can no longer blame the West for the misery of the North Korean people.

In other words, Mr. Trump and his national security team have put Mr. Kim in a corner, offering him peace, security and prosperity, but only if he first denucleari­zes completely, verifiably and irreversib­ly. Little wonder that North Korea is lashing out.

Mr. Kim might be looking for a pretext to get out of his meeting with Mr. Trump, and the military exercises provide a perfect excuse.

He may also be testing Mr. Trump to see how badly he wants the summit. Or he may be trying to drive a wedge between the United States and South Korea in advance of the talks. He knows South Korean President Moon Jae-in is deeply invested in his “Sunshine Policy” with Pyongyang. If the North threatens a little rain, perhaps the South — which desperatel­y wants the summit — will pressure Mr. Trump to cancel the military exercises or be more flexible at the bargaining table.

Mr. Trump needs to show Mr. Kim that he won’t respond to threats by refusing to call off the exercises. Through back channels, he needs to reaffirm his willingnes­s to provide North Korea with security and prosperity in exchange for immediate denucleari­zation but also make clear that if North Korea refuses, the alternativ­e is not the status quo. Sanctions will be ramped up, and military action is possible. Above all, Mr. Trump should take North Korea’s recent outburst as a signal that Pyongyang is feeling the heat.

A cornered animal roars, precisely because it is cornered. Stand firm, Mr. President, and don’t let up the pressure.

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