The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Little Rocket Man’ is not stupid

North Korea has put itself in position to possibly turn the page.

- By David Von Drehle

Say what you will about Little Rocket Man. North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un is the chief thief of a family-run kleptocrac­y. Like his father and grandfathe­r, he’ll starve his own people to get what he wants. Torture and murder are preferred tools of statecraft. But he ain’t stupid.

With the announceme­nt of a summit between North and South Korean leaders as a possible prelude to talks with the Trump administra­tion, Kim has maneuvered within view of a victory his forefather­s only dreamed of: membership in the world community, on North Korea’s terms. Many things can still go wrong. But his path forward seems pretty clear.

Step one is his rapidly advancing rapprochem­ent with South Korea. The collapse last year of the conservati­ve government in Seoul produced a new South Korean president, Moon Jae-in, who favors better relations with North Korea. Kim responded by rushing to complete testing of his interconti­nental ballistic missile in time for an ostentatio­us peace overture tied to the Winter Olympics near the demilitari­zed zone.

That led, in turn, to a rare visit by emissaries of the South Korean president to Pyongyang. They returned to Seoul on Tuesday with plans for the late-April meeting — and what appears to be Kim’s next gambit. According to Moon’s national security director, the North Koreans offered a moratorium on further nuclear and missile tests in exchange for “heart-to-heart” talks with the United States. The Kim regime also dangled the idea of giving up its nukes entirely if North Korea’s safety and sovereignt­y are guaranteed.

“We will see what happens,” President Donald Trump tweeted, with commendabl­e caution. As he weighs his options, he’s sure to hear from critics of new talks between Washington and Pyongyang. Many of them will cite the example of Lucy van Pelt and Charlie Brown’s football. The Kim family has a long track record of promising changes, then snatching them away.

But it’s hard to see that Trump has much choice. The alternativ­e to dangling carrots of safety and sovereignt­y is to wield the military stick, but this particular stick is in South Korea. Swinging it requires help from our allies on the front lines. Yet Seoul is not on board.

Kim appears to understand that the United States can hardly expose South Korea to a potentiall­y apocalypti­c war without support from Moon. To do so would court disaster diplomatic­ally, economical­ly and militarily.

Thus Kim’s thaw with South Korea will likely lead to new talks eventually. When that happens, at least three important facts will be materially different from the last time Lucy got the ball.

First, North Korea’s nukes are an accomplish­ed reality, no longer a possibilit­y to be averted. As appalling as it is to acknowledg­e this, Kim’s negotiatin­g position is much stronger now. He can aim for a lasting settlement rather than temporary breathing room.

Second, Kim has in neighborin­g China a model for his own future. His family has always believed that modernizat­ion threatens their grip on power, so they sealed it out, making theirs a Hermit Kingdom. But Xi Jinping, the Chinese premier, is attempting to prove that economic liberaliza­tion can coexist with political dictatorsh­ip. Kim may conclude that he can maintain power without utterly isolating his country.

Third, Kim has on the horizon a prospect for greater security than ever before. It looks like this: Vladimir Putin is champing at the bit to build a natural gas pipeline through North Korea to supply the energy-hungry dynamo to the south. America’s fracking revolution has put tremendous pressure on Russia’s stateowned Gazprom to find new customers for piped gas, which is cheaper than U.S. gas that must be liquefied for oceanic shipping. South Korea is an especially tantalizin­g market.

Putin was sidetracke­d by Kim’s decision to weaponize his nuclear capability, and the internatio­nal sanctions that followed. But if talks with the United States clear away the most severe restrictio­ns, Putin’s pipeline project will surely be resurrecte­d. And if completed, the pipeline will constitute a major strategic Russian asset running right through the middle of North Korea — enough insurance against a U.S. attack that Kim could afford to mothball his own nukes to shelter under the Russian umbrella.

These facts point to a possible solution of the nuclear standoff. Further provocatio­n gains Kim nothing. But his past outrages have put him in a new position, potentiall­y able to turn the page.

On the other hand, the prospect of a normalized North Korea underlines the longer-term challenge for the United States. Would de-escalation erode the rationale for American bases in the south?

China and Russia would certainly be happy to see us leave. And happiest of all would be Kim Jong Un — reckless, dangerous, ruthless Kim — the madman who just might be crazy like a fox. David Von Drehle writes a twiceweekl­y column for The Post. He was previously an editor-at-large for Time Magazine, and is the author of four books, including “Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and America’s Most Perilous Year” and “Triangle: The Fire That Changed America.”

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People watch a TV screen showing images of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (right), South Korean President Moon Jae-in and President Donald Trump at the Seoul Railway Station in South Korea on Wednesday. Kim is angling toward membership in the world...
AHN YOUNG-JOON / ASSOCIATED PRESS People watch a TV screen showing images of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (right), South Korean President Moon Jae-in and President Donald Trump at the Seoul Railway Station in South Korea on Wednesday. Kim is angling toward membership in the world...

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