[But the backtracking, insults and miscommunications of the last week demonstrate that there was far more in play than just the chemistry between two leaders. In the end, what killed the summit was the rushed nature of the negotiations, the lack of message discipline by senior Trump officials and the absence of the meticulous planning that typically leads to diplomatic breakthroughs.]
By Greg Jaffe and Paul Sonne
The Post's Adam Taylor
explains what led up to President Trump's May 24 letter
to North Korea leader Kim
Jong Un and what to expect going forward.
(Joyce Lee, Adam Taylor/The Washington Post >> |
At the core of President Trump’s foreign
policy is a belief that he can use his personal charisma to charm his way to
world peace.
The collapse Thursday of the planned summit
with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shows the limits of Trump’s me-first
approach to diplomacy.
Trump’s letter to Kim canceling the meeting
on North Korea’s nuclear program neatly summed up his view. In it, the
president described the “wonderful dialogue” that he believed had been
developing with Kim.
“Ultimately that dialogue is all that
matters,” Trump wrote.
But the backtracking, insults and
miscommunications of the last week demonstrate that there was far more in play
than just the chemistry between two leaders. In the end, what killed the summit
was the rushed nature of the negotiations, the lack of message discipline by
senior Trump officials and the absence of the meticulous planning that
typically leads to diplomatic breakthroughs.
“Trump’s style of negotiation — making the
big demand before the ground is fully prepared — is still not disproven,” said
Patrick Cronin, an expert on Asia at the Center for a New American Security and
frequent adviser to the Pentagon. But Trump may have to scale back his
ambitions. “It is not complete denuclearization or bust,” Cronin said.
Trump’s initial overture to Kim, made with
little input from his top foreign-policy advisers, was typical of a president
who has flouted convention from the moment he took office. Trump stunned aides
in March when he accepted an offer made on Kim’s behalf by South Korean
emissaries for a summit to discuss denuclearization.
Before the apparent breakthrough, the United
States and North Korea seemed to be hurtling toward a military confrontation.
The president warned that any threatening
action by North Korea would be met with “fire and fury.” In the run-up to the
Winter Olympics in South Korea, Trump asked his staff to present him with plans
to evacuate the dependents of U.S. military personnel from the peninsula,
according to administration officials.
A presidential official order mandating the
move was drafted and approved by the National Security Council’s lawyers before
White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
talked Trump out of it, according to a former senior administration official
familiar with the matter. The former official spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.
Kelly and Mattis, both former Marine
generals, warned Trump that the plan, if implemented, would alienate South
Korea, ruin the Olympics and possibly trigger a hostile response from North
Korea.
By early April, however, Trump was talking
about a face-to-face summit with Kim, the denuclearization of the peninsula and
possibly even a historic peace treaty with the North.
“Nobody thought we could be on this track in
terms of speed,” Trump boasted from the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews in May
alongside three Americans released by North Korea in a goodwill gesture. The
emotional high came just days after Trump had basked in chants of “Nobel”
during an appearance at a Michigan rally — a suggestion that he was going to
win the Nobel Peace Prize.
“The early success probably convinced Trump
that this was going to be easier than it turned out to be,” said Victor Cha,
Trump’s presumptive nominee to be U.S. ambassador to South Korea before he was
forced to withdraw. “He believed his own hype.”
Much of the typical planning that accompanies
high-level summits was missing. In a more traditional diplomatic process,
months of lower-level meetings would precede a presidential summit.
Those kind of talks are designed to build
confidence and set the agenda for the principals. That process normally would
have led North Korea to disclose all of its nuclear facilities so that
Washington would have a clear understanding, long before the talks began, of
Pyongyang’s program. Such a list was never offered.
In the case of the negotiations over Iran’s
nuclear program, the Obama administration and Tehran talked for more than two
years before a deal was signed. Trump pulled out of the agreement earlier this
month because he said it did not go far enough in cutting off Iran’s path to a
nuclear weapon.
Ultimately the absence of these more
quotidian bureaucratic steps doomed the North Korea talks.
What remains to be seen is whether the
administration’s modus operandi — with its theatrical bravado, grand gestures
and guessing-game optics — can actually deliver a diplomatic win. Trump entered
the sprint to historic negotiations without an ambassador in South Korea and
with a new secretary of state in Mike Pompeo and a new national security
adviser in John Bolton.
Vice President Pence and Bolton provoked a
swift and angry backlash from Kim when they suggested regime change was a
possibility if the North didn’t denuclearize.
“This is North Korea 101,” said Suzanne
DiMaggio, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation. “When you push on them
and expose any weakness, they are going to push back. And someone like Trump
should understand that.”
The head-spinning eight weeks since a South
Korean delegation announced Trump’s decision to meet with Kim have produced
some notable achievements.
The process, originally initiated by South
Korean President Moon Jae-in, succeeded in getting Kim to leave the country for
diplomatic talks for the first time since becoming North Korea’s leader and it
secured the release of the three U.S. prisoners. The dialogue with the North
has also helped the administration glean insight into the contours of North
Korea’s hermetic leadership.
“Pompeo has had two face-to-face meetings
with Kim Jong Un, which is extraordinary in and of itself,” DiMaggio said.
Moving forward, some of the onus will fall on
North Korea to ensure continued negotiations. If Kim resumes nuclear or missile
tests, tensions are likely to ratchet back up to pre-talk levels when war
seemed a real possibility.
Success could also hinge on Trump acting a
bit less like Trump. The president likely will have to set aside some of the
showmanship and accede to the sort of carefully calibrated process that he has
long derided.
“The North Koreans don’t trust us, and we
don’t trust the North Koreans,” said David Kang, a professor at the University
of Southern California who focuses on Korea. “Backing up a ship and loading the
nuclear weapons was never realistic.”
Such a rekindled, more disciplined process
would involve securing incremental wins, such as limits to North Korea’s
weapons program instead of a swift and complete denuclearization.
Trump has demonstrated little interest in
that kind of diplomacy. But at least one North Korea analyst found a small
glimmer of hope in the president’s decision to cancel next month’s summit.
“Trump likes to wing it, but even for him
there was too much uncertainty walking into this meeting,” Cha said. “He showed
a surprising and unusual degree of conventionality in terms of his decision to
cancel.”