US President Donald Trump (left) shakes hands with North Korea's leader
Kim Jong Un before a meeting at the Sofitel Legend Metropole hotel in
Hanoi on February 27, 2019. PHOTO | SAUL LOEB | AFP
US President Donald Trump shook hands with North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un at the start of their second summit Wednesday, saying the
totalitarian state could enjoy a brilliant future if it gives up nuclear
weapons.
Trump predicted a "very successful" summit as
the pair prepared for dinner at the luxury Sofitel Legend Metropole
hotel in Hanoi to follow up on their initial historic meeting in
Singapore in June.
In a brief sit-down ahead of one-on-one talks, Trump repeated his view that North Korea had "tremendous" economic potential.
For his part, Kim pledged to do his "best" to achieve an outcome that "will be welcomed by all people."
They
were due to open with about 20 minutes of head-to-head talks before
sitting around a table with only a handful of top advisers. Negotiations
were then scheduled to resume on Thursday.
Earlier, Trump sent a tweet touting North Korea's "AWESOME" potential if his "friend" Kim agrees to relinquish his weapons.
Scandals home
The president
risks being distracted by scandal back in Washington, where his former
lawyer Michael Cohen was set to describe him as a "conman" in bombshell
testimony to Congress scheduled for shortly after the summit dinner ends
on the other side of the world.
But Trump, seeking a
big foreign policy win to push back against domestic troubles, believes
he can make history with North Korea — and claims Japan's prime minister
has already nominated him for a Nobel Peace Prize.
His
goal is to persuade Kim to dismantle his nuclear weapons and resolve a
stand-off with the totalitarian state that has bedevilled US leaders
since the end of the Korean war in 1953.
To lure Kim
into radical change, Trump is believed to be considering offering a
formal peace declaration -- though perhaps not a formal treaty -- to
draw a line under the technically still unfinished war.
At
the same time, Washington faces mounting pressure to extract
significant concessions from Kim, who has so far shown little desire to
ditch his nuclear capability.
Denuclearisation
China's
Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Wednesday the Hanoi meeting could be "an
important step towards advancing the denuclearisation" of the Korean
peninsula.
However, Washington and Pyongyang disagree even on what denuclearisation means precisely.
And
while North Korea has now gone more than a year without conducting
missile and nuclear tests, it has done nothing to roll back the weapons
already built.
A former real estate tycoon who often
boasts he is one of the world's best negotiators, Trump is pitching a
vision of North Korea as a new Asian economic tiger if it surrenders its
nuclear status.
He said the country could quickly
emulate the summit's host, Vietnam — a communist state once locked in
devastating conflict with the United States, but now a thriving trade
partner.
And he has invested himself personally in the
relationship with Kim, creating the diplomatic equivalent of a Hollywood
odd-couple bromance.
Before Singapore, they were slinging bizarre insults — Trump calling Kim "rocket man" and Kim calling him a "dotard."
With
North Korea then busily testing missiles and conducting underground
nuclear tests, analysts feared the duo were egging each other on towards
a catastrophic confrontation.
Now, Trump talks of "love" and claims that his ground-breaking policies defused the threat posed by Kim.
Struggle influence
Critics
warn Trump is so keen to score a deal that he could give away too much,
too quickly, endangering US allies South Korea and Japan.
In
Singapore, Trump took his own generals by surprise when he announced a
suspension of military exercises with the South — something the North
badly wanted.
Washington would ideally like Kim to
dismantle a key nuclear facility at Yongbyon, allow in international
inspectors, or even hand over a list of all his nuclear assets—something
the North Koreans have categorically refused to do.
In
return, Trump is believed to be considering dangling relief from tough
international sanctions. Opening diplomatic liaison offices is another
possible US concession.
Another possibility is a joint declaration to end the Korean War, which closed with a ceasefire but no peace treaty.
Some
analysts fear this hugely symbolic gesture would upset the delicate
power balance in a region where the US and China are already struggling
for influence.
Those pushing for a scaled-back US foreign policy footprint around the world would welcome the gambit.
"If
you get an end of war declaration, I think that's really important
symbolically because it starts to change the mentality," Daniel Davis,
at the conservative Washington-based Defense Priorities think tank, told
AFP.
And Trump deserves credit, he said. "You just
can't ignore the fact that he's the only one of the last nine American
presidents that has even gotten to this point. No one else has even had
the conversations, no one else has had these summits."
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