The Japan Times - Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump

EUR -
AED 4.231725
AFN 75.467573
ALL 95.722724
AMD 434.383833
ANG 2.062664
AOA 1056.634145
ARS 1597.533891
AUD 1.672991
AWG 2.074379
AZN 1.954186
BAM 1.953186
BBD 2.315621
BDT 141.071203
BGN 1.96959
BHD 0.435746
BIF 3422.250517
BMD 1.152273
BND 1.480786
BOB 7.944368
BRL 5.946421
BSD 1.149671
BTN 107.091678
BWP 15.772959
BYN 3.4067
BYR 22584.548869
BZD 2.312226
CAD 1.606263
CDF 2655.989045
CHF 0.922147
CLF 0.026826
CLP 1059.22672
CNY 7.930691
CNH 7.93481
COP 4227.020957
CRC 534.977071
CUC 1.152273
CUP 30.535232
CVE 110.618233
CZK 24.52002
DJF 204.782179
DKK 7.471775
DOP 70.115401
DZD 153.548377
EGP 62.589664
ERN 17.284094
ETB 179.525066
FJD 2.596995
FKP 0.87286
GBP 0.873596
GEL 3.093859
GGP 0.87286
GHS 12.680738
GIP 0.87286
GMD 85.268191
GNF 10116.95645
GTQ 8.795229
GYD 240.627965
HKD 9.030536
HNL 30.540332
HRK 7.534827
HTG 150.893474
HUF 384.486387
IDR 19582.417052
ILS 3.607046
IMP 0.87286
INR 106.861732
IQD 1506.184258
IRR 1520049.605329
ISK 144.472225
JEP 0.87286
JMD 181.256636
JOD 0.816932
JPY 183.957489
KES 149.561692
KGS 100.766232
KHR 4597.727111
KMF 492.020794
KPW 1037.040704
KRW 1741.383649
KWD 0.356444
KYD 0.958118
KZT 544.800887
LAK 25315.888454
LBP 103130.774468
LKR 362.740836
LRD 210.96766
LSL 19.536877
LTL 3.402363
LVL 0.696998
LYD 7.352224
MAD 10.801444
MDL 20.229453
MGA 4806.525665
MKD 61.641575
MMK 2419.575731
MNT 4116.80119
MOP 9.281678
MRU 45.672885
MUR 54.099426
MVR 17.814183
MWK 1993.514758
MXN 20.582481
MYR 4.64481
MZN 73.687893
NAD 19.536454
NGN 1587.981156
NIO 42.302468
NOK 11.255057
NPR 171.344457
NZD 2.024088
OMR 0.443737
PAB 1.149661
PEN 3.977577
PGK 4.973258
PHP 69.608234
PKR 320.792672
PLN 4.281719
PYG 7437.111381
QAR 4.19199
RON 5.089128
RSD 117.418524
RUB 92.547131
RWF 1679.13822
SAR 4.326275
SBD 9.262859
SCR 16.646776
SDG 692.515834
SEK 10.90592
SGD 1.482647
SHP 0.864503
SLE 28.403231
SLL 24162.599082
SOS 657.017855
SRD 43.038607
STD 23849.722631
STN 24.466831
SVC 10.059537
SYP 127.485123
SZL 19.528949
THB 37.604447
TJS 11.019752
TMT 4.044478
TND 3.389364
TOP 2.774396
TRY 51.378403
TTD 7.799663
TWD 36.866971
TZS 2995.909178
UAH 50.352176
UGX 4313.227564
USD 1.152273
UYU 46.557691
UZS 13968.306074
VES 545.475042
VND 30350.868226
VUV 137.124058
WST 3.187501
XAF 655.074622
XAG 0.015778
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.114075
XCG 2.072027
XDR 0.815887
XOF 655.085977
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.990108
ZAR 19.544449
ZMK 10371.835754
ZMW 22.217459
ZWL 371.031404
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.99

    +5.63%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump
Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump / Photo: Brendan Smialowski - AFP/File

Why emboldened Kim had little need for photo-op with Trump

US President Donald Trump may have hoped for an impromptu talk with his old friend Kim Jong Un during a recent trip to Asia, but analysts say the increasingly emboldened North Korean despot had few good reasons to join the photo-op.

Text size:

Trump sent repeated overtures to Kim during his barnstorming tour of Asia, saying he was "100 percent" open to a meeting and even bucking decades of US policy by conceding that North Korea was "sort of a nuclear power".

But Pyongyang kept mum on the invitation, instead firing off missiles and sending its foreign minister to Russia and Belarus, with whom it has deepened ties in recent years.

"The brutal reality is that Kim Jong Un had no incentive to participate," said Seong-Hyon Lee, a visiting scholar at the Harvard University Asia Center.

"It was a fundamental miscalculation by Washington to believe he would," said Lee.

Trump's repeated overtures instead represented a "victory" for the North Korean leader -- offering him and his nuclear program a massive degree of credibility, Lee said.

"President Trump gave Kim a massive, unearned concession," he explained.

The pair -- who Trump once famously declared were "in love" -- last met in 2019 at Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas after the US leader extended an invitation to Kim on Twitter.

That overture to Pyongyang spearheaded by Trump eventually collapsed over the scope of denuclearisation of the North and sanctions relief.

Since then, North Korea has declared itself an "irreversible" nuclear state and forged close links to Russia, sending troops to support Moscow in its war on Ukraine.

Kim is now in a "pretty sweet spot", Soo Kim, a former CIA analyst, told AFP.

"Russia's backing is probably one of the most decisive factors strengthening and cementing North Korea's strategic hand these days," she said.

"He maintains the upper hand, which makes it easier for him to pass on Trump's invitation," Kim told AFP.

Heading home from South Korea and a meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Trump said he had been too "busy" to meet Kim, though he added he could return.

The scene stood in stark contrast to 2019, when denuclearisation and sanctions relief talks in Hanoi, Vietnam, collapsed in dramatic fashion -- leaving Kim to endure a long train journey back to Pyongyang with no deal in hand.

Vladimir Tikhonov, Korean Studies professor at the University of Oslo, told AFP that experience had left Pyongyang sore.

"They don't want to venture forward too rushingly," he said.

Instead, Tikhonov said, Pyongyang may be holding out for more specific proposals from Trump, including formal diplomatic recognition and sanctions relief without denuclearisation.

- Friends like these -

And closer alliances elsewhere mean Kim has little reason to chase approval from Washington.

This week, Pyongyang's foreign minister Choe Son Hui headed to Moscow, where she and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to strengthen bilateral ties.

Analysts say North Korea is receiving extensive financial aid, military technology, and food and energy assistance from Russia.

That has allowed it to sidestep tough international sanctions imposed over its nuclear and missile programmes that were once a crucial bargaining chip for the United States.

Freeflowing trade with China -- which soared to its highest level in nearly six years last month, according to analysts -- has also helped ease Pyongyang's economic isolation.

Last month, Kim appeared alongside Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin at an elaborate military parade in Beijing -- a striking display of his new, elevated status in global politics.

Kim now has "no reason to trade this new, high-status quo for a photo-op" with Trump, said Harvard's Lee.

Kim has a "strategic lifeline from Russia and China, and he sees the US-China competition as a long-term guarantee of his own maneuverability."

The North Korean leader is now operating from a "position of strength".

T.Shimizu--JT