It sounded like a meme about the summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, but it was not. It was heard on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” – the most conservative program in the most pro-Trump network in the U.S. – before the Singapore summit: “Regardless of what happens in that meeting, between the two dictators ... ” This led to an incisive reply from Adam Best, producer and founder of The Left, LLC. “This gaffe is probably the most honest thing ever said in the program’s history,” Best said. Chesterton would be proud of such sarcasm.*
Beyond the drama of the gestures made by Trump and Kim Jong Un, the specific agreements they reached are unclear. Trump canceled some joint military exercises with South Korea which, during the previous weeks, had been on the brink of derailing the meeting. It is unknown whether it was a gesture of good will or a concession. Pyongyang is committed to initiating denuclearization. There are no dates or deadlines or a budget for undertaking the task. All we know is that, in the words of the U.S. president, it will happen “very soon.”
Future Nobel Peace Prize?
At least it did not end with a door being slammed – which was one of the things people feared given the history and the volcanic nature of the two – and Trump took this success as an opportunity to pin a medal on himself. There are those already promoting his nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. The award already lacks such credibility that one more suspect recipient cannot undermine what little respect it has left. Quite often, the warrior’s respite gets confused with working honestly toward peace. The failed warriors include Menachem Begin, Yasser Arafat, Henry Kissinger, Juan Manuel Santos and President Barack Obama, among others.
In order to sing his own praises during the summit, Trump falsely claimed that when he entered the White House, the U.S. and North Korea were on the brink of (nuclear) war. Whether or not they were on the brink of war, matters escalated later when he moved into the Oval Office and started hurling insults like missiles at Kim Jong Un, whom he called short and fat, and “Rocket Man,” among other offensive names.
The Majority Are In Favor
Promoting his success with Kim, who, like Trump, is already a global celebrity, will allow Trump to increase his popularity during the midterm elections in November. According to a Quinnipiac poll, 72 percent of Americans approved of the encounter. More than 90 percent of Republican voters indicated their support. What seems unusual is that only 20 percent of those surveyed believe that North Korea will give up its nuclear weapons, which was the core issue. There are no polls in North Korea.
There was no discussion about human rights in order to avoid straining the atmosphere surrounding the event. Along with Eritrea, North Korea is one of the most brutal dictatorships in the world. Trump readily forgot those kinds of details, and in subsequent statements, he characterized Kim as a “tough guy,” like the heroes in John Ford movies.
During the summit, Trump showed his new friend a video prepared by his staff which celebrated both of them as great leaders. This is what Kim sought with all his atomic bells and whistles, to be treated as an equal. He must have liked that the Western press compared the Singapore summit to the great summit between Roosevelt, Stalin, and Churchill. If Kim were to denuclearize, he would be a nobody!
Attraction to Dictators
This Trumpian inclination of letting himself be dazzled by strong leaders – or to be more clear, by dictators – could be fodder for psychological analysis. Vladimir Putin is one example of that kind of strong leader, and Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt is another. This week, Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, remarked that the president gets along worse with his Group of Seven allies, especially his Canadian neighbor, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, than he does with strongmen.
While the spin doctors, and Trump himself through his Twitter account, proclaimed the summit as a diplomatic victory for the United States, the Russian press highlighted Kim’s success. One of these Russian newspapers claimed that Trump’s over-reliance on his own powers of persuasion make him a someone who could be manipulated. You might say that this opinion is biased because it comes from Russia. Well, just look at The Economist, a highly regarded liberal British magazine. It’s headline this week was “Kim Jong Won.”
Behind North Korea, one finds China, who along with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, is the great facilitator of this change, of this thaw which saw Trump switch from boasts and insults to inviting his former enemy to Washington. Do not rule out a stroll around Disneyland together. Given their profiles, they are bound to have a great time.
*Editor’s note: The author may have been referring to G. K. Chesterton, an English writer, poet philosopher and journalist, among other professions, who was referred to as the “prince of paradox.” Chesterton died in 1936.
Más química con dictadores que con el G-7
Parece un meme sobre la cumbre entre Donald Trump y Kim Jong-un, pero no lo es. Antes del encuentro en Singapur, se escuchó en el programa Fox & Friends de Fox News, el más retrógrado de la televisión más pro Trump de todo EEUU: “Independientemente de lo que ocurra en esa reunión entre los dos dictadores… (sic)”. Esto provocó una réplica ácida de Adam Best, productor y fundador de The Left: “Esta metedura de pata es, probablemente, la cosa más honesta que se haya dicho en la historia del programa”. Chesterton estaría orgulloso del sarcasmo.
No están claros los acuerdos específicos, más allá de la teatralidad de los gestos. Trump canceló unas maniobras militares conjuntas con Corea de Sur que unas semanas antes habían estado a punto de descarrilar la cita. De hecho, Trump la suspendió. No se sabe si se trata de un gesto de buena voluntad o una concesión. Pionyang se ha comprometido a iniciar la desnuclearización. No hay fechas, ni plazos, ni presupuesto para acometer la tarea. Solo sabemos que será “muy pronto”, en palabras del presidente de EEUU.
¿Futuro Nobel de la Paz?
Trump aprovechó el éxito de que al menos no acabara en portazo -que era uno de los temores dados los antecedentes y el carácter volcánico de ambos-, para ponerse la medalla. Ya hay quien le promueve como futuro Nobel de la Paz. Es un premio con tantos dislates, que uno más tampoco le restaría la poca credibilidad que le queda. A menudo se confunde el descanso del guerrero con el trabajo honesto en la búsqueda de la paz. Entre los fallidos estarían Menachem Begin, Yaser Arafat, Henry Kissenger, Juan Manuel Santos y ¿Obama?, entre otros.
Para ensalzar sus méritos en la cumbre, Trump aseguró que cuando llegó a la Casa Blanca, EEUU y Corea del Norte estaban al borde de la guerra (nuclear), algo que no es cierto. Si estuvo o no al borde de la guerra fue después, cuando él se instaló en el Despacho Oval y comenzó a lanzar insultos como misiles contra Kim Jong-un, al que llamó pequeño gordo y Rocket-man, entre otras lindezas.
La mayoría, a favor
La venta de su éxito con Kim Jong-un, que ya es una celebridad global como él, le permitirá mejorar su popularidad en un año clave en su país: se celebran elecciones legislativas en noviembre. El 72% de los norteamericanos aprueban el encuentro, según una encuesta de Quinnipiac. En el caso del votante republicano, el apoyo supera el 90%. Lo insólito es que solo el 20% de los entrevistados cree que Corea del Norte renunciará a sus armas nucleares, que era el asunto central. En Corea del Norte no hay encuestas.
No se habló de derechos humanos para no enrarecer el clima de concordia. Corea del Norte es junto a Eritrea una de las dictaduras más brutales del mundo. A Trump ya se le ha olvidado este tipo de detalles. En declaraciones posteriores calificó a Kim Jong-un de “tipo duro”, como los héroes de las películas de John Ford.
En la reunión mostró a su nuevo amigo un vídeo, preparado por sus asesores, que les presentaba como grandes líderes. Es lo que buscaba toda la parafernalia atómica de Kim Jong-un, que le trataran como un igual. Debió gustarle que la prensa occidental comparara la cita de Singapur con las grandes cumbres de Roosevelt, Stalin y Churchill. ¡Cómo va a desnuclearizarse, seria un don nadie!
Atracción por los dictadores
Podría ser materia de análisis psicológico la inclinación trumpiana de dejarse deslumbrar por los líderes fuertes, o si lo prefieren más claro, por los dictadores. Vladímir Putin es un ejemplo; el general Al Sisi de Egipto, otro. Adam Schiff, representante del Partido Demócrata y miembro del comité de Inteligencia de la Cámara, comentó esta semana que el presidente se lleva peor con sus aliados del G-7, y con su vecino canadiense, el primer ministro Justin Trudeau.
Mientras los 'spin doctors' (en castellano se puede traducir por vende motos) y él mismo, en su cuenta de Twitter, proclamaban de victoria diplomática estadounidense, la prensa rusa destacó el éxito de Kim Jong-un. Uno de esos periódicos afirma que la excesiva confianza de Trump en sus dotes de persuasión le convierten en una persona manipulable. Pueden decir el lector que se trata de una opinión viciada porque procede de Rusia. Miremos 'The Economist', que es una revista liberal británica de gran prestigio. Esta semana tituló: “Kim Jong Won”.
Detrás de Corea del Norte está China, el gran muñidor junto al presidente surcoreano, Moon Jae-in, de este cambio, de este deshielo, del paso de las bravatas y los insultos a que Trump invite a su antiguo enemigo a Washington. No descarten un paseo conjunto por Disneylandia. Dado su perfil, seguro que se lo pasan en grande.
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