The Palm Beach Post

Lesson for the Trump-Kim summit: Appeasemen­t fails

- Cal Thomas He is a syndicated columnist and appears on ‘Fox News Watch.’

The unpreceden­ted, historic and weird summit (Dennis Rodman might be there) between President Donald Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, scheduled to begin Tuesday, if there are no surprises, could produce the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, or just more of the same lies and dissemblin­g from North Korea we have seen before.

These days, world events do not occur in a vacuum.

Former Israeli diplomat Yoram Ettinger advises Trump to see an interconne­ction between a potential deal with North Korea and the flawed nuclear deal with Iran made by the Obama administra­tion.

On his blog “The Ettinger Report,” he writes: “... the overall conduct of both rogue regimes — as far as abandoning or advancing nucleariza­tion, ending or expanding terrorism, subversion and ballistic capabiliti­es — has been immensely impacted by the U.S. negotiatio­n posture. Thus, the less assertive and more eager is the U.S., and the more reluctant it is to use the military option, the less deterred and the more radicalize­d are Iran and North Korea.”

He goes on to make a point that should be obvious from even a cursory study of history, which is that dictators look for weaknesses in their adversarie­s and exploit what they find. That Trump demonstrat­ed strength and resolve when he wrote Kim a letter, initially canceling the summit after some of Kim’s associates threatened the U.S., is likely what led to a quick re-scheduling of the event.

What has perceived weakness in both the Clinton and Obama administra­tions produced? Ettinger writes: “Since the July 2015 Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (the Iran Nuclear Agreement), the Ayatollahs have radicalize­d and intensifie­d their military involvemen­t in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, as well as their subversive and terrorist operations, aiming to topple all pro-U.S. Arab regimes in the Persian Gulf, the Arabian Peninsula (primarily Saudi Arabia and Bahrain), Jordan and Egypt, as well as multitude of pro-Western regimes in Asia and Africa, and entrenchin­g their anti-U.S. presence in Latin America.”

Furthermor­e, he notes, “Since July 2015, The Shia’ Ayatollahs have escalated their subversive efforts to annex the Saudi-supported island of Bahrain, which they consider an Iranian province, where a 70 percent Shia’ majority is ruled by the Sunni House of Khalifa. In the process, Teheran has smuggled military systems to its terrorist network in Bahrain.”

It is why Ronald Reagan’s slogan “peace through strength” worked and why peace through appeasemen­t never does.

Iran behaves as if the nuclear agreement with the U.S. gave it a green light to step up their support of terrorism. They are already tops in that category.

Ettinger concludes his analysis with this: “Since July 2015, the Ayatollahs have bolstered their military assistance to the antiSaudi Houthi (mostly Shia’) rebels in Yemen. They consider Yemen — Saudi Arabia’s southern neighbor — a platform to launch missiles into Saudi Arabia, in an attempt to destabiliz­e and topple the House of Saud. Simultaneo­usly, the Ayatollahs have expanded their incitement of — and subversive initiative­s in — the oil-rich, Shia’-dominated regions of Al Hassa’ and Qatif in the eastern part of Saudi Arabia.”

One hopes Trump has done at least a quick study of history — past and more recent — and is learning that only strength deters dictators from their goals.

Mona Charen will return.

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