Stakes high at Hanoi meeting

Observers see a wide array of possible outcomes at Donald Trump-Kim Jong Un second summit.

Update: 2019-02-25 19:55 GMT
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un impersonator Howard X (L) and US President Donald Trump impersonator Russel White speak to the media at a hotel in Hanoi on Monday. (Photo: AFP)

Washington: Could the United States and North Korea reach a historic accord – or could it all fall to pieces?

As President Donald Trump prepares for a historic second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, observers see a wide array of possible outcomes.

Here are some scenarios that could emerge from the summit, which opens on Wednesday in Hanoi:

The US pointman on North Korea, Stephen Biegun, and his counterpart Kim Hyok Chol are holding working-level talks in Hanoi to lay the groundwork for the leaders. A complete collapse of the summit seems ‘unlikely because Trump and Kim are so invested in the meeting,’ said Viping Narang, an associate professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

But what comes out of the talks is another story. The two leaders' first summit in Singapore ended in a statement that agreed on ‘complete denuclearisation’ – which Pyongyang defines broadly as an end to nuclear weapons on the Korean peninsula.

The United States says it is seeking the ‘verifiable and irreversible’ denuclearisation of North Korea – a formulation Pyongyang is sure to resist. A simple repeat of the Singapore declaration would be widely seen in the United States as a defeat for Trump.

“What would be a failure is another vague statement about intentions with very little concrete action that each side is committed to take,” said Jung Pak, a former CIA analyst who is now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

Narang said that a repeat of Singapore would be the favored outcome for North Korea, which would face no fresh constraints.

“There's a paradox: for the summit to be useful for the North Koreans, the working-level meetings need to be as vague and drawn-out as possible,” Narang said.

“But for the summit to be useful for the US, the working-level meetings have to deliver something concrete.” A Western diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that if nothing major emerges by the US summer, hawks around Trump such as his national security adviser, John Bolton, could increasingly press to be done with talks and focus on pressure.

No matter how much Trump's team prepares him, this most untraditional of US presidents could reject expert advice and, as is his wont, go with his gut.

Such a scenario would be seen as a catastrophe by much of the Washington establishment, which has spent decades trying to figure out North Korea.

“A failure would be that the US gives more than it receives,” said Abraham Denmark, director of the Asia program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

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