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Making a deal with Kim Jong Un

-Source-The Washington Free Beacon-


"This will not be just a photo op," President Trump said Thursday of his meeting next week with Kim Jong Un. "This will be—at a minimum, we'll start with, perhaps, a good relationship. And that's something that's very important toward the ultimate making of a good deal." Later that day the president added that he might, if things go well, invite Kim to visit him in the United States, perhaps even at the White House. "He has also discussed [possibly] golfing with Kim," a "senior Trump administration official" told the Daily Beast.


Golf? Too soon, Mr. President. Unless this is part of a strategy to get under Kim's skin—he'll be uncomfortable, after all, when he hits the links at Mar-a-Lago wearing charcoal fatigues. More likely it's another example of the president's view that relations between leaders are more important than the relationships between states, regimes, cultures, and ideas. You try to woo Xi Jinping with "a most beautiful" piece of chocolate cake, for example. Even if the results are not ultimately what you wished for.


Let's remind ourselves of whom, exactly, President Trump plans to meet next week. For Kim Jong Un is no ordinary man. The Dear Leader occupies the summit of a hierarchical system of some 25 million people whose lives are controlled by his central government in Pyongyang. Some years ago, Christopher Hitchens described the ruling juche ideology this way: "It is based on totalitarian ‘military first' mobilization, is maintained by slave labor, and instills an ideology of the most unapologetic racism and xenophobia." He did not mention the troops and artillery North Korea has amassed on its southern border, and the engineers who toil in underground laboratories, building nuclear-tipped missiles capable of reaching South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and the United States.


Kim, his father and grandfather, and the regime they direct have given no indication, ever, that they recognize the dignity and worth of human life. Some 36,000 Americans died fighting off the north and its Chinese ally between 1950 and 1953. The North Korean government caused a famine in the 1990s that killed somewhere between hundreds of thousands and more than one million people. Another hundred thousand or so are imprisoned, right now, in the North Korean gulag where slaves are starved, beaten, tortured, and killed. Even high-ranking officials are subject to "liquidation" by sickening methods, including execution by a firing squad of anti-aircraft batteries. Read more

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