I have some good news and some bad news.
The
good news is that for the time being, Donald Trump is no longer threatening
‘fire and fury the likes of which the world has never seen’ against North
Korea.
The
bad news is those four little words: ‘for the time being’. Because Mr Trump is,
well, what’s the best way to describe him? Mercurial? Inconsistent? Known for,
just occasionally, changing his mind from one minute to the next?
The
North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, has gone from ‘rocket man on a suicide
mission’, leading a regime that is ‘depraved’ and ‘twisted’, to ‘a very smart
guy … a great negotiator’.
The US
president clearly suffers from the delusion that his cascade of puerile insults
late last year terrified the North Koreans to the negotiating table. (He said
as much at his rambling, often incoherent post-summit press conference:
‘Without the rhetoric, it would not have happened.’) The truth is that Kim
promised nothing significant that had not been promised before, most notably by
his father in 1994, and then again in 2000, 2005 and 2007.
Ah,
says Mr Trump, this time it’s different. This Kim is different to his father
and grandfather, who ruled before him. Or maybe he isn’t.
Here’s
my favourite post-summit Trump quote: ‘Honestly, I think he’s going to do these
things. I may be wrong. I may stand before you in six months and say “Hey, I
was wrong.” I don’t know that I’ll ever admit that -- I’ll find some kind of
excuse.’
You
want more? How about this? ‘All I can say is they want to make a deal. That’s
what I do. My whole life has been deals. I have done great at it. That’s what I
do. I know when somebody wants to deal and I know when somebody doesn’t. A lot
of politicians don’t. That’s not their thing. This could have been done a long
time ago. I know for a fact. I feel very strongly. My instinct or ability or
talent, they want to make it a deal. It is a great thing for the world.’
I
doubt that Mr Trump will recognise the name Jang Song-thaek.
He was Kim’s uncle, and he was executed in 2013 on Kim’s orders after
being accused of plotting a coup. The US president probably doesn’t know who
Kim Jong-nam was either – he was Kim’s estranged half-brother, who was assassinated
in a poison attack at Kuala Lumpur airport early last year.
A United Nations commission of inquiry
concluded in 2014 that Kim’s regime is guilty of crimes including ‘extermination, murder,
enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual
violence, persecution on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, the
forcible transfer of populations, the enforced disappearance of persons and the
inhumane act of knowingly causing prolonged starvation.’
To which Mr Trump responds: ‘Hey, when you
take over a country, tough country, with tough people, and you take it over
from your father, I don’t care who you are, what you are, how much of an advantage
you have – if you can do that at 27 years old, that’s one in 10,000 could do
that …’
And when it was suggested to him that Kim had done
‘some really bad things’, he shrugged it off: ‘So have a lot of other people done some really bad
things. I could go through a lot of nations where a lot of bad things were
done.’
As recently as last February, in his State of the Union address, Mr
Trump referred to the ‘depraved nature’ of the Kim Jong Un regime and said: ‘No
regime has oppressed its own citizens more totally or brutally than the cruel
dictatorship in North Korea.’ But hey, who expects consistency from the Trump
White House?
According to Amnesty International, in its most recent report on North Korea: ‘Systematic, widespread and gross human
rights violations continued as up to 120,000 people remained in detention … and
were subjected to forced labour as well as torture and other ill-treatment.
Some of the violations amounted to crimes against humanity … Many of those
living in the camps had not been convicted of any internationally recognised
criminal offence; they were detained arbitrarily for being related to
individuals deemed threatening to the state, or for “guilt-by-association”.’
The man
responsible for presiding over this horrific system is now Mr Trump’s new best
friend. So much easier to do business with, it seems, than the uppity Justin
Trudeau of Canada, whom the US president delighted in insulting (‘weak and
dishonest’) just hours before hobnobbing with the murderous dictator of
Pyongyang.
So aren’t I
even a little bit pleased that Mr Trump is now schmoozing with him instead of
threatening to bomb him and his country to smithereens?
Of course I
am. But I still dread what might happen when he realises he’s been conned. His
record does not suggest that he’s a man who handles disappointment well.
By the way,
the final episode of my Future of English
series was broadcast this week. You can hear it or download it, and find all
previous episodes, by clicking here.
Kim must be wetting himself laughing.
ReplyDeleteThe NK nuclear test site collapsed, presumably with valuable equipment and/or scientists inside. It will take time, effort & (Russian?) money to re-site it elsewhere, together with supporting infrastructure, camps, etc
So, Kim needs time. And what better way to pass this time (while his military are constructing a new site) than to humiliate the US president, the scourge reported by his nation's propaganda machine
It's a win-win for Kim. He makes promises & hints, while Trump withdraws thinking he's won a great deal.
Trump's a dangerous fool with power
JW