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US President Donald Trump appears to have gotten what he wanted from North Korea: a willingness to suspend nuclear testing and a promise to put its entire arsenal of atomic weapons on the negotiating table. But is it too good to be true?
After a year of threatening “fire and fury” and ridiculing North Korea’s young leader Kim Jong Un, Trump is now touting diplomatic progress between the rival Koreas. He even says he thinks North Korea, under intense sanctions pressure, is “sincere” in wanting an end to the nuclear standoff.
Other US officials voiced greater skepticism on 6 March, reflecting the mammoth questions about North Korea's intentions.
Trump had his own version, including the Winter Olympics and himself, of the tick-tock leading to Tuesday's dramatic diplomatic developments in Pyongyang. He contended the lead-up to the South Korean-hosted Games "was not going well" until North Korea "came in out of the blue" and decided to participate.
That made the Olympics "very successful," according to Trump, who said South Korean President Moon Jae-in credited the United States for having "a lot to do with that, if not everything."
It was hard for Trump not to relish the moment after being accused so often over his first year in office of taking the world closer to a nuclear confrontation than at any point since the Cold War.
The initial readout from the South Korean talks with Kim seemed to exceed all expectations.
Those are precisely the types of concessions Washington has been seeking to start a diplomatic process with the reclusive socialist state. In exchange for their commitments, Chung said, the North Koreans want an end to military threats and a credible security guarantee.
North Korea didn't confirm the details, and top US officials eyed the news more warily than Trump.
A senior Trump administration official, who briefed reporters on the developments on condition he not be quoted by name, referenced North Korea's "27-year history of them breaking every agreement they have ever made."
The official said the United States is "open-minded and we look forward to hearing more, but the North Koreans have earned our skepticism."
Although an aid-for-disarmament deal in 1994 shut down North Korea's production of plutonium for bombs for nearly a decade, it collapsed when the US accused the North of running a clandestine uranium program instead.
The latest attempt at dialogue unraveled much more rapidly in 2012, when North Korea upended a nuclear freeze-for-food aid agreement by launching a rocket into space in defiance of the United Nations.
Since then, the North has risked the last remnants of international goodwill with its work on a nuclear-tipped missile that could reach the US mainland. A series of tests in the past year appeared to take North Korea to the brink of such capability, even as the country suffered one round of economic sanctions after another.
Whatever Kim's motivation, Trump now faces a new set of diplomatic challenges. In raising the pressure on North Korea, Trump has shocked the world with his seemingly throwaway insults of Kim, who has responded in kind. The tit-for-tat sparked fears of the two nations stumbling into a sequel of the devastating 1950-53 Korean War, which ended without a peace treaty.
Another question will be whether to ease or at least hold off on new sanctions that would risk driving North Korea away from negotiations. Fitzpatrick said:
But Trump may have to show flexibility in some other capacity.
Rep Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee's top-ranking Democrat, urged Trump to use diplomacy to test Kim's seriousness about disarming, or to see if he is just seeking to create a wedge between the US and its South Korean ally.
"As Churchill once famously said, 'to jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war,'" Schiff said.
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