Bolton takes back seat, but remains
looming North Korea summit presence
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[June 07, 2018]
By Matt Spetalnick and David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Just weeks after
John Bolton’s hardline rhetoric infuriated North Korea and nearly
derailed a planned summit between Kim Jong Un and President Donald
Trump, the U.S. national security adviser appears to have taken a back
seat to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for the historic meeting.
While the hawkish Bolton – who has adopted a lower-key approach in
recent days - is expected to be in Singapore for the talks on Tuesday,
Pompeo has taken the lead as the administration assumes a softer tone
toward Pyongyang ahead of the summit, several U.S. officials said.
Pompeo’s ascendance combined with Bolton’s more muted public role
illustrates how the sometimes messy power dynamic in Trump’s inner
circle has played out going into the first-ever meeting between U.S. and
North Korean leaders.
But Trump’s ability to deliver the biggest foreign policy success of his
presidency could rest heavily on the team he has hastily cobbled
together to advise him after announcing in March he was prepared to meet
Kim in an effort to persuade the North Korean leader to give up a
nuclear arsenal that now threatens the United States.
“This summit is being thrown together faster than any we’ve ever seen
for something this important," said one U.S. official, speaking on
condition of anonymity. “So unless we want the president to get played
by Kim, a lot rests with the team that's putting this all together."
Pompeo, first as Trump’s CIA director and now as his chief diplomat,
quickly made North Korea his main focus. But even as Pompeo was
launching delicate diplomacy, Bolton – an outspoken former U.N.
ambassador with a history of fraught dealings with Pyongyang - took up
his post and began pushing a tougher approach to North Korea that he has
long advocated.
Never was that clearer than when Bolton went on television on May 13,
just days after Pompeo returned from a second visit to Pyongyang, and
pressed North Korea to follow the “Libya model” in nuclear negotiations.
Libya unilaterally surrendered its nuclear weapons program in 2003, but
its leader, Muammar Gaddafi, was killed in 2011 by NATO-backed rebels.
Bolton’s demand angered North Korea, which threatened to pull out of the
summit. Trump, who according to one U.S. official was furious that
Bolton had made the Libya comparison,
sought to salvage the meeting by disavowing his remarks.
But North Korea responded harshly. Trump on May 24 then canceled the
summit, only to reinstate it a week later after meeting a North Korean
envoy at the White House, where the president appeared to back away from
his demand for Pyongyang’s swift, complete denuclearization.
Bolton – once denounced by North Korea as “human scum” during his days
at the State Department under former President George W. Bush - was
conspicuously absent from the Oval Office encounter, raising speculation
he was sidelined.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
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President Donald Trump receives a briefing from senior military
leadership accompanied by his new National Security Adviser John
Bolton at the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC,
U.S. April 9, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
'TAKEN THE HINT'
Trump, however, has not frozen Bolton out on North Korea and he
remains a key player, according to multiple U.S. officials.
Bolton, known as a skilled bureaucratic operator, has “taken the
hint” to assume a lower profile and is mindful that his earlier
clashes with Pyongyang could cause problems that should be avoided,
one of the officials said. Before taking office, Bolton openly
advocated North Korean “regime change.”
Bolton has not commented publicly since the president distanced
himself from the Libya comparison and the White House insisted he
would follow the “Trump model.”
Despite that, White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said on Wednesday
that Bolton would travel to Singapore. “Secretary of State Pompeo
has clearly taken the lead on the negotiations,” she told reporters.
“But the national security adviser is going, he’s going to Singapore
and will be part of the talks.”
Pompeo initially developed a rapport with Trump by delivering his
morning intelligence briefings. Trump’s faith in Pompeo is seen as a
key factor for entrusting him with the North Korea portfolio. But
some U.S. officials and analysts have expressed concern about what
they see as the former Republican congressman’s habit of telling
Trump what he wants to hear.
Suzanne DiMaggio, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation
think tank, suggested that if negotiations soured, "then we have Mr.
Bolton looming in the background, ready to jump in.”
Also expected to play an important role on Trump’s summit team is
Matt Pottinger, Trump’s Asia adviser who reports to Bolton at the
National Security Council. The former journalist and ex-U.S. Marine
has helped coordinate North Korea policy and is seen by Korea
watchers as a pragmatic voice.
Sung Kim, a veteran diplomat serving as ambassador to the
Philippines, was called in to lead a small delegation that met in
recent days with North Korean officials in the demilitarized zone
between the Koreas to discuss the summit agenda. He is an
ex-ambassador to Seoul and a former nuclear negotiator with
Pyongyang.
It was a reminder the administration remains short on Asia
expertise, especially after the departure of North Korea negotiator
Joseph Yun, delays in getting in place a new ambassador to South
Korea and the lack of a Senate-confirmed top diplomat for East Asia.
(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick and David Brunnstrom; Additional
reporting by John Walcott and Steve Holland; Editing by Mary
Milliken and Peter Cooney)
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