Foreign Affairs
Related: About this forumWhat is North Korea's next move?
"If the negotiations with North Korea fall apart, the blowback from the president is likely to land squarely on Pompeo, a possibility that Boltonwho all but admitted to torpedoing the Bush-era six-party talks in his memoir Surrender Is Not an Optionmight be betting on. Bolton-watchers say that his Libya remark was not only an attempt to sabotage the summit, but also to publicly stake out his position on the matter. (Bolton is very strategic and unlikely to say things unless hes thought it through, the second senior State Department official, who worked with Bolton under Bush, told me). Should the talks collapse, as many predict they will, given Trumps erratic and irascible nature, it will be Bolton that the president will turn to for a militant response."
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/06/john-bolton-mike-pompeo-north-korea-summit
Tae Yong Ho, the ubiquitous North Korean defector formerly an official at the North Korean embassy in England, made an appearance on A Channel today, and as usual had plenty of advice for the US. Among them, was that Trump should listen to all his advisers with respect to the North Korean nuclear issue. Clearly, this is an implied recommendation for Bolton's point of view. He ended one hours worth of interview on the current North Korean scene, by quoting Reagan, "trust but verify," and added "but verify first." The remarks were specifically addressed to President Trump.
Tae is of the view that North Korea will never completely denuclearize peacefully, and that random and thorough inspections of nuclear facilities are domestically unacceptable in North Korea. He continues to speak in terms of a simple dichotomy, that Kim wants security guarantees, and normalization of relations with the US first; then denuclearization. This is in contrast to the step by step, reciprocal and simultaneous measures recommended by Russia, China, and to a certain degree, South Korea. This is often referred to as the confidence building approach. Tae suggested Kim will offer only known existing facilities for dismantling while keeping a secret infrastructure to maintain his nuclear threat. At the same time, he did say that it was too early to tell if the summit was a failure or not.
Pompeo's office recently postponed an appearance before the Senate to discuss, the "agreement" made in Singapore. Trump alluded to Pompeo's trips to Pyongyang in the White House with cameras present. When will Pompeo go back? Kim returned from Beijing. What is he going to offer? Trump suspended the Ulchi Freedom Guardian joint exercises with South Korea. If something doesn't materialize soon. Pompeo will be eclipsed.
Speaker to the Yanks
(26 posts)(Test post)
soryang
(3,299 posts)"More to the point, criticisms of Trump for legitimizing Kim sound more like the complaints of old-money WASPS upset that nouveau riche people of color want to join their golf club than the statements of people seriously trying to solve the problems of nuclear proliferation or imminent war on the Korean Peninsula."