Trump's Newest Threat To North Korea Makes A Deal Impossible
18
May, 2018
President
Trump again derailed the negotiations with North Korea. It will be
difficult to get them back on track. The attitude he showed
makes it unlikely that any deal will be made.
Tuesday
night North Korea threatened
to cancel the summit with
U.S. President Trump. Remarks by U.S. National Security Advisor
Bolton that the "Libya model" would be applied to North
Korea were taken as insult.
Libya
had bought some equipment that could be used to eventually start
Uranium enrichment. But it never had a coordinated program to develop
nuclear weapons nor did it have the industrial and academic base to
pursue such a project. To get out of sanctions Libya gave up the
little material it had. All was shipped to the U.S. before the
sanctions were lifted. Bolton probably referred to only that part of
the "Libya model".
But
there is also the other part. A few years after Libya had given up
its minuscule nuclear stuff France, the United Kingdom and the U.S.
(FUKUS) waged a regime change war against it. With U.S. help Muhammad
Ghaddafi was murdered by radical Islamists and Hillary Clinton
even joked (vid)
about it. Libya has since devolved into total chaos and a multi-sided
tribal war with continued foreign meddling.
North
Korea naturally rejects both parts of the Libya model. It sees itself
-quite rightly- as a full fledged nuclear state. It demands
negotiations on an equal base.
On
Wednesday, after the North Korean threat to cancel the summit, the
White House spokesperson pulled
back on
Bolton's "Libya model":
Referring to the Libya comparison, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Wednesday that she hadn't "seen that as part of any discussions so I'm not aware that that's a model that we're using.
"I haven't seen that that's a specific thing. I know that that comment was made. There's not a cookie cutter model on how this would work."
The
train to the summit seemed back on its track. Then Donald Trump
derailed it again.
During
a press conference yesterday he was asked
about the "Libya model" issue (vid)
and, in a seemingly off the cuff remark, managed to push the divisive
comparison to
a new level:
“The model, if you look at that model with Gaddafi, that was a total decimation. We went in there to beat him. Now that model would take place if we don’t make a deal, most likely. But if we make a deal, I think Kim Jong-un is going to be very, very happy.”
One
might call that the 'art of the mafia deal': "Sign here or I
will kill you."
Some
media pretend that Trump was only "assuring" Kim
Jong-
un. Reuters headlined Trump seeks to placate North Korea's Kim over uncertain summit; the New York Times: Trump and North Korea Rebuff Bolton’s ‘Libya Model’; Politico: Trump offers North Korea’s Kim assurances and a warning.
un. Reuters headlined Trump seeks to placate North Korea's Kim over uncertain summit; the New York Times: Trump and North Korea Rebuff Bolton’s ‘Libya Model’; Politico: Trump offers North Korea’s Kim assurances and a warning.
In
my book a thread of "total decimation" is a quite a bit
more than "a warning".
The
British Guardian had
a more realistic take: Donald
Trump's threat to Kim Jong-un: make a deal or suffer same fate as
Gaddafi.
The
threat Trump made shows North Korea that it was right to acquire
nuclear weapons and the capability to launch them onto the
continental United States. Giving
them up would be suicidal.
Trump
also mumbled that he would give "strong assurances" to
North Korea and Kim Jong-un for their safety should they make a deal.
He did not explain what those assurances would be. The way Trump
destroyed the nuclear agreement with Iran, which came with "strong
assurances" from a U.S president and a UN Security Council
endorsement, demonstrates that no assurance the U.S. ever gives is
worth the paper it is written on.
When
the summit was announced I gave it little
chance to
succeed because there were too many potential spoilers with interests
to keep the conflict with North Korea going. These include John
Bolton, the U.S. military and the Japan's president Abe.
North
Korea will surely respond to Trump's "total decimation"
threat. It will likely pull out of the summit, planned for June 12 in
Singapore. It may come back if the White House backtracks on
Trump's remarks. China, which is nudging North Korea and the U.S.
towards making a deal, will let the White House know what it needs to
do.
But
I now believe that the summit, if it takes place at all, has zero
chance to succeed. Trump has no knowledge of the political and
technical details and no feel for Asian culture. He will huff and
puff and insult his negotiation partner. He will likely demand the
total nuclear disarmament of North Korea. He will end up with no
deal.
Only
after that failure will he learn that a "total decimation"
of North Korea is not an option he can pursue
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