For high-stakes summit with Kim, Trump
trusts his gut over note cards
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[June 08, 2018]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump will deploy a mix of charm and pressure to coax North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un into a deal to give up nuclear weapons,
trusting his gut instinct over briefing books in his ability to strike
an accord, aides and former administration officials said.
Kim, who at 34 is nearly half Trump's age, will get a concentrated blast
of what friends and foes of Trump have experienced since he became
president: a volatile, unpredictable leader who can be at turns friendly
or tough, or both at the same time.
The June 12 summit in Singapore will be the first face-to-face meeting
between Trump, the former reality TV star who likes to keep people
guessing up to a cliffhanger finish, and Kim, the heir to a reclusive
dynasty with a history of reneging on promises to curb its nuclear
ambitions.
While Trump has received a steady diet of briefings, verbal and written,
about what to expect when he meets Kim, he trusts his intuition more
than anything else, aides and former officials said.
His briefings have covered the gamut from Kim’s family history, the
history of broken agreements with Pyongyang and the status of the
North’s nuclear and missile programs, one source familiar with the
matter said.
Aides expect Trump to try to use a personal touch to try build trust
with Kim. The two leaders have done much to improve their relations
after hurling insults and threats at each other such as who has the
bigger nuclear button.
In his decades as a businessman before entering the White House 18
months ago, Trump did many deals and can bring different skills and
techniques to negotiations, one source close to the president said.
"But it's very 'gut,' which people are not used to in the diplomatic
world because people are used to reading note cards," said the source,
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Critics contend that Trump's seat-of-the-pants approach may be too risky
in dealing with North Korea, which alarmed Washington with its rapid
advances on a long-range missile possibly capable of hitting the United
States.
'IT'S ABOUT ATTITUDE'
Trump has said his meeting with Kim is a get-to-know-you session and
could be the first of several aimed at getting North Korea to scrap its
nuclear arsenal.
Trump is preparing for the summit and taking it very seriously, said a
senior White House official who asked not to be identified, "but locking
himself away and doing what's been done in the past clearly hasn't
worked."
Trump himself said on Thursday that he did not think he had to prepare
very much and that "it's about attitude. It's about willingness to get
things done."
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A combination photo shows U.S. President Donald Trump and North
Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Washignton, DC, U.S. May 17, 2018 and in
Panmunjom, South Korea, April 27, 2018 respectively. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque and Korea Summit Press Pool/File Photos
Other U.S. officials have questioned whether Trump is doing enough
to get up to speed.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo came back from meeting Kim in
Pyongyang to describe the North Korean leader as "a smart guy who’s
doing his homework” for the summit, according to one U.S. official
familiar with the matter.
However, the senior White House official pointed to Trump's
relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping as a sign of how he
might deal with Kim: Trump frequently talks about how close he is to
Xi, but this has not stopped him from talking tough on trade with
Xi.
One former senior administration official who has watched Trump
engage with world leaders said he has not had a consistent method in
diplomatic dealings, describing him as "kind of all over the map" at
times hectoring, at others friendly.
On Thursday, Trump dangled the prospect of inviting Kim Jong Un to
the White House if he deemed the summit a success while also
signaling he was willing to walk away if he thought talks did not go
well.
Trump goes to Singapore confident in his deal-making skills based on
his career as a New York real estate developer, which made him a
billionaire.
His negotiating skills as president have had mixed success: his
attempt to negotiate a healthcare deal with lawmakers fell apart
last year, but then he was able to get tax-cut bill through
Congress.
On the foreign policy front, his hardline stance on China to cut its
massive trade surplus with the United States has risked a trade war,
while talks to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement have
stumbled badly.
But that is not likely to deter Trump from his negotiating style.
"I think he wants to go big or go home," said Michael Allen, a
former National Security Council official under Republican President
George W. Bush.
(Reporting by Steve Holland; additional reporting by Matt
Spetalnick, David Brunnstrom and John Walcott; Editing by Mary
Milliken and Grant McCool)
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