Trump: North Korea's Kim 'Very Honorable'
President Donald Trump says he expects to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un "very soon" and praised Kim as being "very open" and "very honorable."

"We have been told directly that they would like to have the meeting as soon as possible. We think that's a great thing for the world," Trump said Tuesday after talks with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.

"We'll see where that will all go," Trump added. He repeated that he was willing to walk away from talks with North Korea but stressed "I think we have the chance to do something very special."

The White House has said the ultimate goal of any negotiations between Trump and Kim denuclearization, adding the United States' "maximum pressure" campaign on Pyongyang will continue and sanctions on the isolated country will not be lifted until concrete actions are taken towards complete and total denuclearization.

When asked what complete denuclearization means, Trump said "It means they get rid of their nukes, very simple." ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...424-voa01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2274.ph0ao0037n.23df
 
Singapore, Indonesia hold joint naval drill Eagle Indopura

The navies of Republic of Singapore and Indonesia are taking part in the joint naval exercise Eagle Indopura which kicked off at Changi Naval Base in Singapore on April 19.

The bilateral exercise aims to enhance the interoperability and professionalism of both navies through anti-surface and anti-air warfare serials, as well as maritime security serials.

For the first time since inception, this year’s exercise will feature a counter-terrorism serial in the maritime environment between the RSN’s Maritime Security Task Force (MSTF) and the TNI AL’s Western Fleet Sea Security Group, GUSKAMLABAR (GKBA).

Both navies exercised information sharing and sense-making to enhance maritime awareness, and joint operational planning to provide responses for regional maritime security contingencies. During the serial, both headquarters collaborated effectively to deploy naval assets to disrupt a simulated terror attack threatening commercial shipping transiting through the Singapore Strait.

This year, the RSN participated with a Formidable-class frigate RSS Formidable, a Victory-class missile corvette RSS Valour, and for the first time, an Independence-class littoral mission vessel – RSS Independence.

The TNI AL participated with two Diponegoro-class frigates KRI Diponegoro (embarked with BO-105 helicopter) and KRI Sultan Iskandar Muda, a Kondor-class patrol craft KRI Pulau Rusa and quick reaction force teams from GKBA, and a CN-235 maritime patrol aircraft.

Held since 1974, Exercise Eagle Indopura is the Singapore Armed Forces’ longest-running bilateral exercise with a foreign military.

The exercise is scheduled to conclude on April 27.
singapore-indonesia-hold-joint-naval-drill-eagle-indopura-320x213.jpg

https://navaltoday.com/2018/04/23/s...ld-joint-naval-drill-eagle-indopura/?uid=5430
 
Philippines:

Finally, after several delays on the delivery, this week the Philippine Navy has finally received its shipment of Spike-ER short range surface-to-surface missiles, Typhoon MLS-ER missile launchers, and Mini Typhoon 12.7mm Remote Control Weapon Systems from Israeli defense company Rafael Advanced Defense Systems.

This would be an important milestone for the Philippine Navy as it marks its entrance to the missile age, with the Spike-ER being its first surface-to-surface missile system.

The missiles, launchers and RCWS will all be equipped on the Multi-Purpose Attack Craft (MPAC) Mk.III, 3 units of which were activated last May 2017 and assigned with the Littoral Combat Force.

Each MPAC will get a Mini Typhoon armed with a Browning M2 50-caliber machine gun, and a Typhoon MLS-ER launcher. Each missile launching system can carry 4 ready-to-fire Spike-ER missile launchers and missiles, although the MPAC could carry more rounds due to availability of an ammunition storage.

It would be remembered that the Philippine Navy had delivery issues with these products from Rafael, despite the contract making Rafael responsible for delivery from Israel to the Philippines.

The Philippine Navy even asked General Headquarters AFP for approval of their request to use C-130 heavy tactical transport aircraft from the Philippine Air Force (PAF) to pick-up the missiles and launchers from Israel, although these requests were denied several times due to the limited availability of the PAF C-130s in line with events in the country that require their lifting capability.

Due to these availability issues, the PN and Rafael decided to push through with the delivery through commercial shipping.
TYphoon%2BMLS%2BER%2BFiring.jpg

A Typhoon MLS-ER firing a Spike-ER missile
http://maxdefense.blogspot.com.au/2018/04/philippine-navy-finally-receives-spike.html
 
Indonesia:

The Indonesian Navy officially received its second Nagapasa-class submarine, KRI Ardadedali, from South Korean shipbuilder Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (DSME) in a ceremony on April 25.

KRI Ardadedali (404) is the second of overall three submarines Indonesia is building in cooperation with South Korea’s DSME under a US$1,1 billion contract signed in 2011.

Following the delivery and commissioning ceremony, Ardadedali and her crew departed DSME’s shipyard in Okpo, Geoje and are expected to arrive in Surabaya after a two-week journey.

The lead submarine in the class, KRI Nagapasa, arrived in Indonesia on August 28, 2017, after entering service on August 2 in a delivery and commissioning ceremony in South Korea.

While the first two units were built in South Korea, the final submarine in the class will be assembled by the Indonesian state-owned shipbuilder PT PAL in Surabaya, Indonesia, under a technology transfer program.

Indonesia already operates two smaller Type 209 submarines, Type 209/1300 KRI Cakra and KRI Nanggala, built by German Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft over 30 years ago. DSME is also contracted for work on the upgrades of Cakra-class submarines which will include a modernized periscope mast, hull works and new combat management systems (CMS).

The more advanced Nagapasa-class submarines are 61 meters long, displace 1,400 tonnes and are operated by a crew of 40 sailors. They have an operating range of approximately 10,000 nautical miles and reach a speed of 21 knots while submerged.
IMG-20180426-WA0015.jpg

https://navaltoday.com/2018/04/25/i...dsme-built-submarine-kri-ardadedali/?uid=5430
 
SEOUL

- The leaders of North and South Korea signed a declaration on Friday agreeing to work for the “complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula.
At their first summit in more than a decade, the two sides announced they would seek an agreement to establish “permanent” and “solid” peace on the peninsula.

The declaration included promises to pursue military arms reduction, cease “hostile acts,” turn their fortified border into a “peace zone,” and seek multilateral talks with other countries, such as the United States.
https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-...BN1HY113?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=Social
 
North Korea's Nuclear Test Site Collapsed, Needs to be Monitored – Chinese Study
The data in the Chinese study was collected in the wake of Pyongyang's sixth nuclear test on September 3, which allegedly triggered four earthquakes over the subsequent weeks.

According to the scientists at the University of Science and Technology of China, the first of those seismic events was detected eight-and-a-half minutes after the bomb went off and was "an onsite collapse toward the nuclear test center."

"In view of the research findings that the North Korean nuclear test site at Mantapsan has collapsed, it is necessary to continue to monitor any leakage of radioactive materials that may have been caused by the collapse," the authors of the University of Science and Technology China paper wrote.
Meanwhile, Chinese authorities have stated that they found no radiation risk from the samples collected along the border, Associated Press reported.

On September 3, 2017, North Korea announced it had successfully conducted a test of a hydrogen bomb, with the yield of the device being estimated at more than 100 kilotons of TNT. On the same day, a Chinese seismological center registered a 6.3 magnitude earthquake in North Korea that was a "suspected explosion," while South Korea's weather agency detected an artificial 5.6 magnitude quake in areas in the North's Hamgyeong Province.

Last week, the KCNA news agency reported that Kim Jong-un was determined to advance the de-nuclearization of the Korean peninsula, planned to suspend nuclear and missile tests and to focus on economic growth instead.

North Korea's de-nuclearization is expected to be discussed at a groundbreaking summit between Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump by June.

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...sputnik01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2276.ph0ao0037n.23g3


(WELL I GUESS WE KNOW WHY HE'S SO FRIENDLY ALL OF THE SUDDEN...WANTS US TO PAY FOR THE CLEANUP!)
 
Taiwan:

In preparation for a ramp up in domestic missile production, Taiwan's National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology—the island’s weapons research institute—is seeking to import at least 600 ring laser gyroscopes (RLG) from the United States.

The technology is believed to be used in Taipei's Hsiung Feng IIE cruise missile and Yun Feng ballistic missile.

RLGs and their imbedded GPS capability are used to improve the accuracy of RLG Inertial Navigation Systems (INS)s on military aircraft and missiles. News that the RLGs will be exported to Taiwan indicates that a previous US reluctance to export such weapons key components and materials for fear of upsetting China may be loosening.
 
N. Korea to Invite US, S. Korean Experts & Journalists to Nuclear Shutdown
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un plans to invite experts and journalists from Seoul and the United States to observe when North Korea shuts down its nuclear test site in May, South Korean officials said Sunday.

South Korean presidential press secretary Yoon Young-chan, also quoted Kim as saying: "The United States, though inherently hostile to North Korea, will get to know once our talk begins that I am not the kind of person who will use nuclear weapons against the South or the United States across the Pacific."

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told ABC News the best possible outcome for President Donald Trump's planned summit with Kim in three to four weeks would be Pyongyang freeing three Americans it is detaining and agreeing to an "irreversible" and "verifiable" end to its nuclear weapons program. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...429-voa01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2278.ph0ao0037n.23i2


US defense chief vows 'ironclad' resolve to defend S Korea after peace talks with North
US Defense Secretary James Mattis has reiterated what he referred to as American "ironclad" commitment to defend South Korea a day after Seoul signed a joint peace declaration with the North in which both sides vowed to work toward a denuclearized Korean Peninsula and formally end the Korean War.

The announcement came in a statement issued Saturday by Pentagon's chief spokesperson Dana White, saying that Mattis made the pledge while discussing the outcome of the inter-Korea summit with his South Korean counterpart Song Young-moo.

"Secretary Mattis reaffirmed the ironclad US commitment to defend the ROK (Republic of Korea) using the full spectrum of US capabilities," said the statement. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...presstv01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2278.ph0ao0037n.23i7


Historic North-South Summit for National Reconciliation and Unity, Peace and Prosperity
Kim Jong Un Crosses Demarcation Line at Panmunjom for North-South Summit

Kim Jong Un, chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea and chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, came to Panmunjom on April 27 for the historic north-south summit meeting and talks.

The respected Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un left the Phanmun Pavilion at 9 a.m., leading senior party, government and army officials, and reached the Demarcation Line at Panmunjom.

President Moon Jae In of south Korea was present before the line to greet Kim Jong Un. Kim Jong Un shook hands with Moon Jae In and exchanged greetings.

He crossed the Demarcation Line and had souvenir photos taken with Moon Jae In with the Phanmun Pavilion in the north side portion and the "House ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...28-kcna01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2278.ph0ao0037n.23ic
 
Rebels, Miltary Clash in Myanmar; Thousands Flee
Fighting in northern Myanmar between government forces and the rebel Kachin Independence Army, or KIA, has forced more than 4,000 people to flee their homes.

Col Naw Bu, a KIA spokesman, said the fighting will become "more intense" because the army is sending more troops to the area.

Aid organizations have requested access to the clash-stricken, remote northeastern area near the country's border with China. Charities fear thousands of vulnerable people remain trapped since the fighting escalated in April.

"Our biggest concern is for the safety of civilians, including pregnant women, the elderly, small children and people with disabilities," Mark Cutts, the head of the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs told the French news agency. "We must ensure these people are protected."

Elsewhere in Myanmar, envoys from the U.N. Security Council are expected Monday after visiting Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar where Rohingya Muslims fled after military-led violence erupted around their homes in Myanmar.

The delegation arrived in Bangladesh Saturday for a first-hand look at the situation of the Rohingya. The U.N. envoys will meet with Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina before leaving for Myanmar where they will visit Rakhine State and meet with de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Nearly 700,000 Rohingyas left Myanmar's Rakhine State after the violence started in late August 2017. Myanmar denies accusations of ethnic cleansing. Rohingyas in Myanmar have been denied citizenship even though many of their families have lived in Myanmar for generations.

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...429-voa01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2278.ph0ao0037n.23j1
 
Parents sue North Korea over death of detainee Otto Warmbier
WASHINGTON (AP) — The parents of U.S. college student Otto Warmbier filed a wrongful death lawsuit against North Korea on Thursday, saying its government tortured and killed their son.

Fred and Cindy Warmbier filed the lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., seeking compensation for the death of the 22-year-old, whose plight had compounded tense U.S.-North Korean relations.

Otto Warmbier, who was a student at University of Virginia, was arrested by North Korean authorities in January 2016 for stealing a propaganda poster and sentenced to 15 years in prison with hard labor. He died in June 2017, days after he was repatriated to the U.S. with severe brain damage.

While the lawsuit may prove largely symbolic given the difficulty of recovering any damages the court might order, it comes at a delicate time in relations between Washington and Pyongyang. President Donald Trump is planning an unprecedented summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in the coming weeks to address the threat posed by its nuclear weapons, and the leaders of North and South Korea are due to meet Friday.

“Otto was taken hostage, kept as a prisoner for political purposes, used as a pawn and singled out for exceptionally harsh and brutal treatment by Kim Jong Un,” Fred Warmbier said in a statement ...MORE

https://inhomelandsecurity.com/pare...tainee-otto-warmbier&utm_campaign=20180427IHS
 
Trump Should Get The Nobel Peace Prize For North Korea Talks, Moon Says
TOKYO — If anyone were to win the Nobel Peace Prize for the current effort to solve the North Korean nuclear problem, it should be President Trump. That’s what South Korea’s president said Monday when it was suggested that he himself should be in line for the award.
President Moon Jae-in has gone out of his way to flatter Trump and credit him for creating the environment that has brought about the remarkable diplomatic rapprochement now unfolding.

But even by Moon’s standards, the latest remarks were really something.

They came after Lee Hee-ho, the widow of late South Korean president Kim Dae-jung, sent Moon a message congratulating him for Friday’s summit with the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un.

The day-long summit was filled with warm encounters and ended with a joint declaration from the two sides pledging to bring about a formal end to the Korean War and work toward the “complete denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula ...MORE

https://inhomelandsecurity.com/trum...orea-talks-moon-says&utm_campaign=20180430IHS
 
Just love how the political hoy polloy start talking about awarding the Peace Prize when nothing has actually yet occurred.....I suspect the whole thing is just another ploy by the Norks, they have priors for doing exactly what they are doing now. They must be laughing up their sleeves at how they can get Sth Korea and the US jumping through hoops for them. :rolleyes:
 
Trump Offers DMZ, Singapore as Locations for Meeting with Kim
Meeting the North Korean leader at the Demilitarized Zone would be "intriguing," U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters on Monday, hours after he tweeted he would like to hold a summit with Kim Jong Un at the "Peace House/Freedom House" on the border of the two Koreas.

"We're looking at various countries, including Singapore, and we are also talking about the possibility of the DMZ," Trump said in the White House Rose Garden at the conclusion of a news conference with Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari.

"Some people maybe don't like the look of that, and some people like it very much," Trump responded to reporters as he prepared to step off the podium outside the Oval Office.

"There's something that I like about it because you're there, you're actually there where if things work out, there's a great celebration to be had on the site not in a third-party country," explained the U.S. president.

While not specifically mentioning other venues besides Singapore and the DMZ, Trump did say "the good news is everybody wants ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...430-voa01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2279.ph0ao0037n.23jy
 
What a “Chimney Collapse” Means (and Doesn’t Mean) for Mt. Mantap

Several media reports continue to misconstrue the meaning of “cavity collapse” and “chimney collapse” at the Punggye-ri nuclear test site, concluding either that the entire test site has collapsed or that radiation is leaking into the atmosphere as a result of the September 2017 nuclear test.[1] However, neither a “cavity collapse” nor a “chimney collapse” equates to a test site collapse, as explained in a recent 38 North article.
More importantly, neither type of collapse means that there are cracks or fissures all the way to the surface that would allow radioactive particles and gases to vent into the atmosphere. Instead, what this means is that the chamber where the test took place, under hundreds of meters of granitic rock and volcanic layers, has likely closed in after the explosion. And while this makes the chamber no longer usable, the damaged area is overburied and the damage is unlikely to have reached to the surface.
To illustrate what a “cavity collapse” or “chamber collapse” means, the US Government, Office of Technical Assessment has explained this phenomenon in a publication, entitled “The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosion”:
The predominantly steam-filled cavity eventually collapses forming a chimney. When collapse occurs, the steam in the cavity is condensed through contact with the cold rock falling into the cavity. Within a few minutes or days after an underground nuclear test, “When the gas pressure in the cavity declines to the point where it is no longer able to support the overlying rock, the cavity may collapse. The collapse occurs as overlying rock breaks into rubble and falls into the cavity void. As the process continues, the void region moves upward as rubble falls downward. The “chimneying” continues until:
– the void volume within the chimney completely fills with loose rubble,
– the chimney reaches a level where the shape of the void region and the strength of the rock can support the overburden material. or
– the chimney reaches the surface.

The report also makes clear that,Tunnel tests [the case for all tests at Punggye-ri] are typically overburied. Collapse chimneys do not usually extend to surface.”
This point is reiterated in well-crafted post by Bruce Tabor on Quora, which was written in response to a question raised about the first post-test tremor following the September 2017 test.
More here=https://www.38north.org/2018/04/mtmantap043018/
 
Seoul: US forces to stay regardless of potential peace treaty with North
South Korea's presidential office says the United States military presence in the Asian country will continue and would be unrelated to any peace treaty with the North, after an adviser suggested otherwise in a newspaper column.

"US troops stationed in South Korea are an issue regarding the alliance between South Korea and the United States. It has nothing to do with signing peace treaties," said a spokesman for the presidential Blue House, Kim Eui-kyeom, on Wednesday, citing President Moon Jae-in.

The statement emphasized that the nearly 28,500 American forces in South Korea should remain there even if a peace accord is signed with North Korea.

The statement came in response to inquiries by local media outlets regarding a column written by presidential adviser and academic Moon Chung-in. Published earlier in the week, it said the continued presence of the huge US military contingent in South Korea would be difficult to justify in case a peace treaty was signed with the North. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/rok/2018/rok-180502-presstv01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2281.ph0ao0037n.23m7


Philippines gets new Israel missiles to boost naval capabilities
The Philippines has completed the purchase of its first-ever ship-borne missile systems as part of a military modernization program and for the expansion of its naval capabilities in the disputed South China Sea.

Arsenio Andolong, Philippine Defense Ministry spokesman, said on Wednesday that the Israeli-made Spike ER missiles were fitted on locally manufactured gunboats, known as multi-purpose attack craft.

An unnamed senior naval commander said the Philippines would now be more of a force in patrolling the South China Sea and its pirate-plagued southern waters. "It will be a deterrent because, this time, we have a credible armament that can strike a punch whether the target is a small or large ship."

The missiles have a maximum range of eight kilometers (5 miles). The Philippines is paying $11.6 million in total for the system. In addition to that, the Southeast Asian country's warships will be also armed with advanced, longer-range missiles ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/mili...presstv04.htm?_m=3n.002a.2281.ph0ao0037n.23mh
 
Human Rights Abuses Overshadow North Korea's Overtures
Amid the euphoria surrounding the North/South Korea summit last week, North Korea’s human rights record must remain front and center during any negotiations or talks, says David Maxwell, a fellow at the Institute for Corean-American Studies.

Speaking on The John Batchelor Show, Maxwell noted the roughly 250,000 prisoners who populate the rogue nation’s gulags and emphasized that human rights is a primary national security issue.

“It is the prisoners who are mining uranium; it is the political prisoners, the prisoners in those gulags who are supporting the nuclear program, supporting the military,” Maxwell said. “It is enslaved Korean people from the north who are overseas foreign workers, who are working under slave conditions to gain hard currency for the regime.”

He also cited the 2014 United Nations commission of inquiry that recommended Kim Jong-un’s referral to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.

“Our focus on human rights undermines the legitimacy of the regime,” he said. “The more we talk about the nuclear program, the more it enhances the legitimacy of the regime.” ...MORE

https://inhomelandsecurity.com/huma...rth-koreas-overtures&utm_campaign=20180502IHS
 
North Korea says denuclearization pledge not result of U.S.-led sanctions

North Korea said on Sunday its intention to denuclearize, unveiled at a historic inter-Korean summit, was not the result of U.S.-led sanctions and pressure, warning the United States not to mislead public opinion.
Impoverished North Korea has been hit by a series of U.N. and U.S. sanctions in recent years in a bid to rein in its nuclear and missile programs.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowed “complete denuclearization” of the Korean peninsula in the first inter-Korean summit in more than a decade on April 27, but the declaration did not include concrete steps to reach that goal.
The North’s official KCNA news agency said Washington was “misleading public opinion” by claiming the denuclearization pledge was the result of sanctions and other pressure.
The United States should not “deliberately provoke” the North by moving to deploy strategic assets in South Korea and raising human rights issues, KCNA said, citing a foreign ministry spokesman.
“This act cannot be construed otherwise than a dangerous attempt to ruin the hardly-won atmosphere of dialogue and bring the situation back to square one,” the spokesman was quoted as saying.
It would not be conducive to resolving the issue of denuclearization if Washington miscalculated North Korea’s “peace-loving intention” as a sign of weakness and continued to pursue its pressure and military threats, KCNA said.
More here=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...esult-of-u-s-led-sanctions-idUSKBN1I703M?il=0
 
North Korea:
What is Kim up to?
The surging optimism about the imminent end of the Korean Peninsula’s long reign as a global flashpoint is overwhelming the legions of realists and pessimists around the region. The new Kim Jong‑un is charming and erudite, seemingly impatient to get past the ugly debris of war and prolonged confrontation and step into an era of peace and harmony on the peninsula—even reunification could emerge as a real prospect.

For those directly responsible for testing these new political waters, a critical assessment is needed to gauge the sincerity of Kim’s suspiciously abrupt change in direction since approximately August or September 2017. First came the frantic and bellicose surge to perfect long-range delivery vehicles for nuclear warheads. Then we saw a similarly frantic, last-minute push to give the Winter Olympics in the South an ice-melting ‘unified Korea’ flavour, combined with follow-on summits with potentially transformative agendas.

People are complicated, but when speculating about Kim’s sincerity, there would appear to be three primary possibilities. The first is that Kim was genuinely wedded to developing an operational nuclear arsenal that he considered indispensable to North Korea’s long-term viability. But then something happened in the second half of 2017 that placed a big question mark over this national aspiration. What that might have been we don’t know, but there’s a great deal about North Korea that we don’t know.

The other two possibilities are based on the proposition that there was nothing spontaneous or impromptu about Kim’s change of direction. To the contrary, the change had been planned in the hope or expectation that the missile-test program would unfold successfully (which it did).

So one scenario stems from the idea that North Korea still has to demonstrate the ability to separate a warhead from a missile in space and survive re-entry through the atmosphere. This final development step is also the most dangerous in terms of the pressures or temptations it could generate for an American president to launch a pre-emptive surgical strike.

Under this scenario, the ‘peace offensive’ is designed to derail and deflate the pressure being applied on North Korea, force the US or South Korea to say ‘no deal’ and create a political window for an aggrieved North Korea to perfect this final capability in greater safety.

The other scenario stems from the possibility that Kim concluded some time ago that prior assessments of North Korea’s future as a nuclear-weapons state had simply been wrong. Nevertheless, he allowed the long and painful investment in developing nuclear capabilities to unfold as far as practicable in order to maximise North Korea’s negotiating leverage. But it does point to Kim being genuine in his preparedness to denuclearise.

This is a very primitive foray into the possible motives behind Kim’s conspicuous change in direction. On the other hand, much of the optimism on display seems to be the product of a somewhat reckless willingness to take the new images and statements at face value and to regard curiosity about Kim’s motives as superfluous.

Even if Kim is genuine–and I have argued earlier that this is a realistic possibility—the current euphoria might still undergo a hard landing. Washington is pressing to load all the bases and hit a home run at the Trump–Kim summit, launching a highly condensed denuclearisation process that would strip North Korea of all traces of its nuclear program and associated delivery systems within two years. The experience with Libya in 2003 provides the example to follow.

Kim, on the other hand, has spoken of continuing to meet ‘frequently’ with the United States in order to build trust and confidence, suggesting that he has in mind a more prolonged step-by-step exercise.

A final point worth exploring in this context is the role of President Donald Trump. If anything of consequence emerges, Trump will get a great deal of the credit simply because it happened on his watch. In fact, praise—though probably not a Nobel Prize—seems warranted, on two grounds in particular.

The first is that the extravagant idiosyncrasies of Trump’s personality and associated style of governance presented both friends and adversaries with an entirely new and unprecedented array of risks and opportunities. In short, he made ‘business as usual’ very difficult. If any issue stood to benefit from a rude shake-up, it was the Korean Peninsula.

Secondly, Trump zeroed in on China as the key player that had managed for too long to remain on the fringes of the issue and avoid any risky or costly policy settings that might have changed the calculus in Pyongyang in helpful ways. Trump failed to persuade China to really get stuck into the challenge, but the changes in China’s approach were nonetheless consequential.

More broadly, however, what is most different about this latest push to change the status quo on the Korean Peninsula is the visibility of North Korea as the agent of change and its clear preference to work primarily with or through South Korea and the US, rather than through China.

My guess is that, alongside an official and still genuine enmity, this has a lot to do with American approachability, dependability and transparency, a legacy that Trump inherited and must now live up to and make the most of.

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/w...ce=CampaignMonitor&utm_term=What is Kim up to
 
Trump: Time, Place Set for N. Korea Summit
Pressed by reporters Friday on Air Force One about his upcoming summit with North Korean leader, U.S. President Donald Trump declined to reveal specifics.

"It will be very soon. I have the date. I have the location," said Trump. "It's all agreed to."

Before leaving Washington for a one-day visit to Dallas, Texas, the president indicated the location and date for the historic meeting had been confirmed with North Korean authorities.

On the White House South Lawn, the president said the U.S. and North Korean governments were in constant contact and discussions also had included the release of three Americans held by Pyongyang.

Tony Kim and Kim Hak Song were teaching at the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, the only private university in the country. They were separately detained in 2017 and accused of participating in anti-state activities and trying to overthrow the government. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/...504-voa01.htm?_m=3n.002a.2283.ph0ao0037n.23og


US will not decrease forces in South Korea: Bolton
US National Security Adviser John Bolton says that President Donald Trump has not asked the Pentagon for options to reduce American forces deployed to South Korea.

John Bolton's statement came on Friday, after The New York Times reported on Thursday that the US president was seeking options to curb the number of American troops stationed in South Korea.

"The New York Times story is utter nonsense. The President has not asked the Pentagon to provide options for reducing American forces stationed in South Korea," Bolton said.

On Wednesday, South Korea's presidential office said the United States military presence in the Asian country will continue and would be unrelated to any peace treaty with the North. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/mili...presstv02.htm?_m=3n.002a.2283.ph0ao0037n.23ob
 
US, S. Korea Plan Summit, Dismiss Talk Of US Troop Withdrawal
The U.S. and South Korean presidents will meet before Donald Trump’s summit with the North, officials said, as the allies insisted American troops won’t be on the table in upcoming nuclear negotiations.

The White House said the May 22 summit between Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in in Washington “affirms the enduring strength” of the alliance between the two countries.

Trump said Friday he won’t use the linchpin of that alliance — the U.S. military presence on the divided peninsula — as a bargaining chip in his talks with the North.

“Troops are not on the table,” he told reporters Friday at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.

But he didn’t rule out the eventual removal of some troops, suggesting the issue could come up in separate cost-sharing negotiations with the South.

“Now, I have to tell you, at some point into the future, I would like to save the money,” he said. “You know, we have 32,000 troops there.”

Trump also said the White House and Pyongyang had settled on a date and location for their first-ever summit. He didn’t reveal those details but has previously said the meeting would be held later this month or in early June.

Some 28,500 U.S. service members are based in South Korea, although U.S. Forces Korea says that number can swell to 32,000 with rotational units and ongoing exercises. ...MORE

https://inhomelandsecurity.com/us-s...-us-troop-withdrawal&utm_campaign=20180507IHS
 

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