Trump’s Bold Historic Gamble

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

President Donald Trump appears to belong to what might be called the Benjamin Disraeli school of diplomacy.

The British prime minister once counseled, “Everyone likes flattery; and when you come to Royalty you should lay it on with a trowel.”

At his Singapore summit, Trump smartly saluted a North Korean general and then lavished praise on Kim Jong Un as a “strong guy” with a “good personality” and a “great negotiator.” “He’s funny, and … very, very smart … and a very strategic kind of a guy. … His country does love him.”

Predictably, Trump is being scourged for this.

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Yet, during his trip to Peking in 1972, Richard Nixon did not confront Chairman Mao on his history of massacres and murder, though Nixon’s visit came in the midst of Mao’s Cultural Revolution, a nationwide pogrom.

Nor did Churchill or FDR at their wartime summits confront their ally Stalin for his legendary crimes against humanity. Both gushed over “Uncle Joe.”

Still, if the Trump-Kim camaraderie goes south and the crisis of 2017, when war seemed possible, returns, Trump, as he concedes, will be charged with naivety for having placed his trust in such a tyrant.

Yet, to Trump’s credit, we are surely at a better place than we were a year ago when Kim was testing hydrogen bombs and ICBMs, and he and Trump were trading threats and insults in what seemed the prelude to a new Korean War.

Whatever one may think of his diplomacy, Trump has, for now, lifted the specter of nuclear war from the Korean peninsula and begun a negotiating process that could lead to tolerable coexistence.

The central questions to emerge from the summit are these: What does Kim want, and what is he willing to pay for it?

Transparently, he does not want a war with the United States. That black cloud has passed over. Second, Kim and North Korea have emerged from their isolation in as dramatic a fashion as did Mao’s China in 1972.

In 2018, the North was invited to the Seoul Olympics. Kim met twice with South Korea’s president and twice with China’s Xi Jinping. Vladimir Putin’s foreign minister stopped by. And Kim had a face-to-face summit with a U.S. president, something his grandfather and father never came close to achieving.

It is unlikely Kim will be retreating back into the cloisters of the Hermit Kingdom after being courted by the world’s foremost powers.

What does Trump have on offer to induce Kim to end the lifetime of hostility? It is a long menu of what Kim can expect if he will surrender his nuclear weapons and dismantle the factories and facilities that produce them.

Among the benefits proffered: recognition of his dynasty and U.S. security guarantees, an end of sanctions, foreign investment, a peace treaty signed by the United States to replace the 65-year-old armistice and the eventual withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Korean peninsula.

Trump has already attended to one of Kim’s complaints. The joint military exercises we have conducted annually with South Korea for decades have been declared by Trump to be “war games” and “very provocative” and have been suspended.

What is being asked of Kim in return?

He must provide an inventory of all nuclear weapons and where they are hidden, surrender them all, dismantle his plutonium and uranium production plants, and shut down his testing sites, all under the watch of U.S.-approved inspectors.

He must renounce any and all nuclear weapons forever, and accept a regime of international inspections that would guarantee he never cheats on that commitment.

Here is where the crunch comes. Kim is being told that he must give up the weapons whose very possession by him are the reason why the world powers are paying him heed.

As leader of a country with a per capita income smaller than Haiti’s, Kim is being told he must surrender the weapons that placed him and North Korea in the world’s most exclusive club, to which only eight other nations belong: the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, France, India, Pakistan and Israel.

Will Kim, whose nuclear weapons have enabled him to strut on the world stage and trade insults with the president of the United States, give them up to become the leader of a poor backward nation, with half the population of South Korea and not even 4 percent of the economy of the South?

Will he give up his most reliable deterrent against an attack by the United States or China?

In the Kim-Trump relationship, this is where the rubber meets the road. Kim has seen how Americans treat nations — like Gadhafi’s Libya, Saddam’s Iraq, and Iran — that decline to develop or surrender the kind of weapons his country took decades to plan, test, produce and deploy.

Should Kim give up his nukes, what U.S. president would fly halfway around the world to meet him one-to-one?

Hence the crucial question: Will he ever really give them up?

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23 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
June 15, 2018 8:04 am

I’ll give this one to the Orange Crusader. It was wonderful watching him and Kim talk of peace to the joy of all those hopeful seouls (I couldn’t resist) in that area, as it was watching all the NeoRats suffer like the mangy dogs they are. Good show.

BB
BB
June 15, 2018 8:16 am

Yes , it’s worth watching the Neocon Jews eat political shit.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
June 15, 2018 8:29 am

I’m not losing sleep over Pakistan’s nukes, so if Kim keeps a couple laying around as insurance against an American attack, I won’t lose any sleep over that either. Neither he nor any small country need an ICBM to deliver a nuke. They could put it on a boat and run it up the Potomac. I don’t care if Trump gave Kim “legitimacy”. What’s he gonna do with it? We should give serious thought, though, to the idea that Kim is not an independent actor, but a total puppet of China and/or the North Korean Army. The whole dictatorship thing can get out of hand until the dictator is captive of the state apparatus. Mugabe’s Zanu PF is reportedly like that.

I don’t believe everything from Thomas Wictor, but this thread is interesting https://mobile.twitter.com/ThomasWictor/status/1007078155222319104

Even the whole narrative about him having his own brother poisoned is questionable. Maybe the poisoning was a message to Kim Jong Un, not from him.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 15, 2018 8:32 am

Kim will give them up; he is surrounded by the big boys.

Wip
Wip
June 15, 2018 8:43 am

It would be insane, imo, for him to give them up.

Westcoastdeplorable
Westcoastdeplorable
  Wip
June 15, 2018 7:58 pm

But what if Kim is bluffing and doesn’t have actual nukes in the first place? That’s a possibility.

I thought President Trump’s approach in achieving this was by the sales textbook. Presented the offer, then read the snarky response correctly and chose the take-away, with a pause for reaction. When it came in buckets, he sent his minions to engage rapport and give Kim hope the deal wasn’t dead, resulting in a meeting with the big guy who treated him gently and with respect, resulting in ink (signing the memorandum of understanding) aka “The art of the deal”. No other President in living history has balls his size.
I’ll be the main thing Un wants is a McDonalds in NORK. Let’s give him one.

And anyone criticizing President Trump for his actions doesn’t understand one thing about sales or how to help people make the decision you know they want to make.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
June 15, 2018 8:53 am

It seems that Kim’s concessions would have to be coordinated with the withdrawal of US forces from SKorea…Which would save US a lot of money, and should be supported by the taxpayers.

Gator
Gator
  pyrrhus
June 15, 2018 7:34 pm

I agree. If I was Kim, that would be my condition. And I hope trump gives it to him, there is no need to have all those troops in SK anymore. Maybe, while we’re at it, we can get out of Japan, too.

One of the things I still like about trump is how he reveals the left to be total hypocrites when it comes to their supposedly anti-war positions. Bush was a Nazi for what he did in the Middle east, Obama gets a peace prize and praise from the left despite initiating attacks in more places the W, and drastically stepping up the drone strikes. Trump takes steps to end the 65 year conflict in NK, and he is accused of appeasing Kim. These people are literally cheerleading another pointless war.

As for me, I have been wanting us out of Korea for years, and I really don’t care about anything other than not wanting another mountain of corpses with ‘made by the USA’ stamped on them, or the hundreds of billions of dollars in debt such a conflict would inevitably add to it.

TC
TC
June 15, 2018 9:14 am

A nuclear NK is no threat to the US. Let’s be honest – the only reason this is a “big deal” is because Israel fears those NK nukes will make their way to Iran, which would be a game changer for the middle east.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TC
June 15, 2018 9:21 am

Good thinking

K Vizzle
K Vizzle
June 15, 2018 9:34 am

He’d be a fucking idiot to give them up.

Stucky
Stucky
June 15, 2018 10:54 am

The main thing wrong, or missing, from this article is that while Trump does deserve credit …. he gets far too much credit. This deal that Trumpego is claiming as his own would never ever have been possible without China.

Imagine if da Chinks told the Norks — “Hey, keep your nukes! We’ll protect you from the USA no matter what.”. With such a guarantee Rocketman would never come to the table. We all know this.

Also, all this ejaculation over a supposed victory is quite premature. I think Rocketman read The Art Of The Deal and is playing Trumpego …. meaning, I don’t believe he’ll ever give up ALL of his nukes. I’m with others here who think he’d be a fool to get rid of them as His Nukes are the ONLY thing that’s keeping his fat ass out of being tossed in Boiling Kimchee … cuz USA!USA!USA! “guarantees” for his safety are about as reliable as the NAFTA deal, the Iran Deal, and all the other deals we break whenever it suits our purposes.

Lastly, there was a 4 minute Hollywood produced video shown to Rocketman … where North Korea is a booming economy with super highways, gleaming cities, and even a 5 star hotel, The Trumpkim. I can just see Rocketman thinking to himself — “Holy fucken slave labor, Batman! What a load of horseshit!!”

Stucky
Stucky
  Stucky
June 15, 2018 11:03 am

Oh, one other thing that pisses me off ….. Trump saluting that Nork general. Buchanon is full of shit concerning just being nice, or whatever. The leader of America’s Armed Forces has no business saluting a goddamned Nork!!! Look, all of us here were pissed when Prez Oreo bowed to that mooslim fucker.

This is no different. In some ways, it’s worse.

[imgcomment image?w=970&h=582&fit=crop&crop=faces&auto=format&q=70[/img]

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Stucky
June 15, 2018 9:51 pm

The video shows the Nork saluted first and Trump is being polite by returning the honor. This is less egregious than Bush2 kneeling before the Pope or Obama bowing before the Saudi king.

AirmanCoyote – Do we have to salute when we are out of uniform?
Capt Pangloss – Can a civilian salute an officer?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  EL Coyote
June 15, 2018 11:46 pm

El C.
Or donning a beanie and kissing the Jewish Blarney Stone.

Falconflight
Falconflight
  Stucky
June 15, 2018 9:56 pm

Are you congenitally dishonest, or didn’t you watch the video? The General saluted Trump first, after Trump first extended his hand for a handshake.

Vodka
Vodka
  Stucky
June 15, 2018 10:28 pm

It’s called ‘protocol’, you idiot. I can now see why you suffer in your life.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Stucky
June 15, 2018 10:37 pm

Shangi La

Mauritius, Malaysia, oh I want to take ya
Bahrain, Sri Lanka, come on Little Rocket
Kim Jong Un, Trumpego, baby why don’t we go, Cambodia

Off the Singapore Keys, there’s a place called Shangi La
That’s where you want to go to get away from it all
Little Rocket Man, Trump dick melting in your hand
We’ll be falling in love to the rhythm of a jack booted band
Down in Shangi La

Mauritius, Malaysia, oh I want to take ya
Bahrain, Sri Lanka, come on Little Rocket
Kim Jong Un, Trumpego, baby why don’t we go,

oh I want to take you down to
Shangi La, we’ll get there fast maybe we’ll do some blow
That’s where we want to go, way down in Shangi La

Maldives, that Mongolia mystique
We’ll visit your country and we’ll inspect your chemistry
And by and by we’ll defy a little bit of emnity
Starvation aside, hotels and neon lights
That dictator look in your eye, give me a commie contact high
Way down in Shangi La

Mauritius, Malaysia, oh I want to take ya
Bahrain, Sri Lanka, come on Little Rocket
Kim Jong Un, Trumpego, baby why don’t we go

oh I want to take you down to
Shangi La, we’ll get there fast maybe we’ll do some blow
That’s where we want to go, way down in Shangi La
Mainland China, will want to catch a glimpse
Everybody knows a little gull like Kim Jong Un
Now if you want to go and get your ratings up in the fall
Go down to Shangi La

Mauritius, Malaysia, oh I want to take ya
Bahrain, Sri Lanka, come on Little Rocket
Kim Jong Un, Trumpego, baby why don’t we go

oh I want to take you down to
Shangi La, we’ll get there fast maybe we’ll do some blow
That’s where we want to go, way down in Shangi La

Mauritius, Malaysia, oh I want to take ya
Bahrain, Sri Lanka, come on Little Rocket
Kim Jong Un, Trumpego, baby why don’t we go

Stucky
Stucky
  EL Coyote
June 16, 2018 10:47 am

+1000 EC.

Doc Pangloss, the sexy mulatta, Maggie, me, rabbits of every gender, and a whole host of your supporters salute you for that ingenious piece of work.

Buckhead
Buckhead
June 15, 2018 12:25 pm

Hmmm….I’d say that there’s a good chance that he gives them up Stucky ( all but a couple buried deep in some cavern) . Why….because as you stated China has their back. During the rhetoric of the past year China stated that if the USA started something with NK they would jump into the fray . If NK started it they’d stay on the sidelines . NK has little to lose on the defense of their portion of the Korean Peninsula . China will never allow unfriendly forces from the West at their door step.

With NK de-nuclear nutted they would get the sanctions lifted and perhaps more economic assistance and who know maybe become a system like China’s that is authoritarian but has roots in capitalism.

What does China get from this ….. an economic drain that may be one day can become self-sufficient .

What does Iran have to lose in all of this. The fact that once NK has been dealt with all the focus will be on them…Oh crap is what they’ll be saying if this plays out .

JIMSKI
JIMSKI
June 15, 2018 4:32 pm

Even our best nuke has a shelf life of around 6-8 years. They need maintenence and the boomy parts to squeeze the radialogical material for fission does decay over time. If he keeps 5 nukes but does not have the ability to enhance 238 into 235 ( which takes time and factories) he will not have a nuke within a decade.

poaster of 1000 names
poaster of 1000 names
June 15, 2018 10:06 pm

what everyone is missing is that any nation that really wants to do so can easily defeat the USA…the american regime runs on its economy, and that is a ponzi economy…it only stays on its feet by avoiding recession..and n. korea, if invaded, could easily beat america by crippling its economy…america now has essentially open borders…it is that way by edict of the elites…if america invaded, n korea could easily send in a guerilla team to infiltrate nyc, boston, chicago etc and make explosives and then attack the infrastructure of those big cities–the power stations, the water, sewer, transport, freeway overpasses etc, could all be crippled with homemade explosives…
the big cites of america are the heart of this ponzi economy…once that has been crippled with fear, it’s all over for the american elite regime…

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
June 15, 2018 10:53 pm

Let’s not forget, NK and Iran are the only 2 left with no Rothchild Central Bank.