Kim
isn’t playing by the ‘America First’ doctrine
by FRANK SELLERSMay 16, 2018, 08:37
North
Korea is not willing to play a game with America where America alone gets ‘the better end of the deal’, as Trump
would put it.
Some
sort of arrangement whereby North Korea has no assurance that America won’t
eventually march in and overthrow the regime and give Kim the Gadhafi treatment
over some trumped up pretext, as in Libya, while North Korea has agreed to give
up its nuclear program is simply not what this process has been about.
America
has to be willing to put some skin in the game and to compromise with Pyongyang
if it is to do the same, in essence, some sort of exchange of value.
Pyongyang
gives up its nukes under the assurance that Washington will conduct or rehearse no offensive against it.
But
Trump has already said he’s not sitting down with Kim unless he knows up front
that he’s going to ‘win’, and has already backed out of one nuclear deal so far
this month. RT reports:
Pyongyang
is not interested in any negotiations that envisage only unilateral
denuclearization without guarantees North Korea won’t be left totally
defenseless like Libya in case of aggression, deputy foreign minister has said.
Criticizing
Washington’s demands for unilateral concessions and unconditional “nuclear
abandonment,” North Korea’s first vice minister of foreign affairs Kim Kye-gwan
recalled the eventual fate of Libya and said such negotiations style is
unacceptable for Pyongyang.
“This
is not an attempt to solve the problem through dialogue but rather the
manifestation …to force the destiny of the collapsed Libya and Iraq to our
dignified state,” Kim said, according to KCNA.
“I
doubt whether the United States really wants sound dialogue and negotiation,”
Kim added, again noting that “the world is so well aware that our country is
not Libya or Iraq.”
Denouncing
the ongoing “sanctions pressure offensive” against the North, he accused
Washington of misrepresenting North Korea’s “generosity and bold measures as an
expression of weakness.”
“We
will not be interested in talks anymore if (they) only try to push us
unilaterally into a corner and force us to give up nukes,” he said. “It would
be inevitable to reconsider whether to respond to the upcoming summit with the
US.”
Meanwhile, Seoul has
expressed that it regrets Kim’s decision, stressing that the South is
committed to the declarations made between Kim and Moon.
South
Korea has accused its northern neighbor of undermining the spirit of
reconciliation after Pyongyang abruptly called off Wednesday’s high-level
intra-Korean meeting in protest over joint US-S. Korean military drills.
“It
is regrettable that the North’s unilateral move to postpone the high-level
inter-Korean talks, citing the annual South Korea-US air drills does not
conform with the spirit and purpose of the agreements reached between the
leaders of the two countries,” the unification ministry said in a
statement cited by news agency Yonhap.
South
Korea urged Pyongyang to return to the negotiations table, stressing that Seoul
remains “strongly committed” to the so-called Panmunjom Declaration,
adopted during the historic summit of Kim Jong-un and Moon Jae-in on April 27.
With
America’s history of hostility against nations that have previously disarmed,
it’s a wonder that things have made it as far as they have. Perhaps certain
security guarantees can manage to manifest in the upcoming weeks, the process
could resume, that is assuming that the US is truly interested in a peace deal
and denuclearization, which could potentially put the South’s participation in
the missile defense system in jeopardy. And no more practicing the
neutralization of the North.
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