The Road to Singapore

By: - June 9, 2018

A year ago North Korean President Kim Jong Un was threatening the world with nuclear missiles.  Pacific countries were running civil defense drills not seen since the 1950s. But on Tuesday President Trump will meet Kim in Singapore to discuss the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. How did we get here, on the road to Singapore and a summit meeting, instead of preparing for nuclear war?

Presidential Resolve

The first answer is strong presidential leadership.  President Trump made it clear to the North Koreans – and to everyone else in the world – that no matter how anyone speaks, America carries a big stick. First, he showed resolve in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan.

He let military leaders set the rules of engagement.  His only instructions were to kill the bad guys. So we did in a matter of months what Obama wouldn’t allow the military to do for 6 years: destroy ISIS and bring the Taliban to heel.

Trump also used Syria to show Russian President Vladimir Putin that although he’s ready to talk about making peace, we are the strong party and Putin is the weak one.  When Putin’s mercenaries in Syria attacked American troops, we killed them – over 200 of them – in a single battle.  That showed Putin and the world that we are capable and willing.

Xi Jin Ping expected that North Korea would distract the American president, allowing China to continue its aggressive expansion in the South China Sea.  Maybe he thought that President Trump would bargain away navigation rights and territorial disputes in return for China’s bringing Kim to heel.  Instead, the U.S. Navy “showed presence” in the heart of the islands falsely claimed by China as their sovereign territory, throwing China off balance.  To further punctuate the message, President Trump threatened tariffs against Chinese goods, showing that we are confronting China on every issue that harms American interests.

The Nuclear Trap

Also on the road to Singapore, Trump explained very clearly to Kim that his nuclear weapons are no good without backing from China or Russia. I call it “the nuclear trap.” Kim thought nuclear weapons would give him security, but Trump showed him that if he attacks us, he’ll be killed.

If Kim uses nukes to start a war, the counterattack will annihilate him and his entire family.

A country with only a handful of nuclear weapons and no great power backing is like a person holding a gun that can’t pull the trigger. Holding that gun only makes him more likely to get shot. It becomes protection only when it is used.  But if Kim uses his weapons to start a war, the counterattack will annihilate him and his entire family.

Neither China nor Russia would join a nuclear war that Kim started.  That leaves Kim holding a gun with no hope ever of pulling that trigger.  President Trump captured decades of nuclear deterrence and non-proliferation doctrine in a single tweet: “I have a bigger button – and mine works!”

The Road to Singapore is Paved with Tax Reform

Pres. Trump vowed to make America great again, to put America first.  Tax reform was probably the most important thing he’s done to prepare for the summit.  It unleashed an explosive burst of economic activity the likes of which America hasn’t seen since the early 1980s.

Tax reform was probably the most important thing he’s done to prepare for the summit.

Every country in the world wants to benefit from our coming boom.  Because of that, they followed our lead on sanctions.  We even put sanctions on China when we caught Chinese ships selling fuel to North Korea.  Nobody argued with us because they all want a piece of the American pie.  North Korea saw that for once they couldn’t just evade the sanctions.

Intricate Diplomacy

Trump hasn’t gotten enough credit for his diplomatic maneuvering.  If George H.W. Bush or Barack Obama had achieved this level of progress, the world would have been praising their wisdom and depth of understanding.  But Trump is accused of light-mindedness, even as his approach is bearing fruit.

Diplomacy is like fishing . . .

Diplomacy is like fishing: you hook a big trout, and you have to play him deftly to keep him on the hook without snapping the line. It’s a delicate operation, and challenging enough with one fish.   But in world diplomacy, you have 200 lines in the water, and a small team helping one man manage them all.

Trump is doing that successfully.  He is showing hostile nations an opportunity to become potential friends, without shedding blood.  He is restoring the balance of interests between the U.S. and allied nations, to eliminate burdens on American producers of goods and services.

It is true that Trump’s methods are unorthodox: he imposes tariffs, then before retaliatory tariffs are imposed back on us, he proposes that the G7 nations become one huge duty-free zone.  That keeps opponents and allies alike off balance.  But perhaps only a narrow, twisting path leads to solving the problem of North Korean WMD.  Buckle up.

  • RSS WND

    • K.C. athlete kicks on the leftist outrage machine
      On May 11, Kansas City Chiefs placekicker Harrison Butker gave the commencement address at Benedictine College, a Catholic school in Kansas. Within 48 hours, the media elites were ablaze with outrage. There's a "growing uproar," warned NBC's Hoda Kotb. A Catholic speaker talked about Catholic issues to Catholic graduates. But the Butker critics who aren't… […]
    • Another big lie: Liberals are more 'caring' than conservatives
      People often ask, "How do you handle mean, vicious people when out in public?" The truth is I rarely encounter nastiness. It does happen, but thankfully, it is pretty rare. In general, when people don't like me, they possess the maturity to restrain themselves from verbal road rage. I conduct myself the same way when… […]
    • The Biden campaign: Dead in the water
      On Nov. 5, 2023, the New York Times published a story headlined, "Trump Leads in 5 Critical States as Voters Blast Biden, Times/Siena Poll Finds." Focusing on the states most likely to decide the 2024 election, the Times reported, "The results show Mr. Biden is losing to Mr. Trump, his likeliest Republican rival, by margins… […]
    • A fiction book about a killer vax
      In their weekly podcast, Hollywood veteran Loy Edge and longtime WND columnist Jack Cashill skirt the everyday politics downstream and travel merrily upstream to the source of our extraordinary culture. The post A fiction book about a killer vax appeared first on WND.
    • From the Pit to Power: An election drama in 2 acts
      Joe Biden's claim, speaking recently to Democrat donors, that Donald Trump intends to be a democracy-demolishing dictator, if elected, is shameless. "He's saying it out loud," Biden seethed. No, Joe, he didn't. The accusation stems from Trump's playful response to a Sean Hannity question during a December town hall meeting in Iowa. To anyone watching… […]
    • Too many laws, too little freedom
      We are caught in a vicious cycle of too many laws, too many cops, and too little freedom. It's hard to say whether we're dealing with a kleptocracy (a government ruled by thieves), a kakistocracy (a government run by unprincipled career politicians, corporations and thieves that panders to the worst vices in our nature and… […]
    • 50 NFL players are arrested annually – but the pro-family one gets attacked
      (THE BLAZE) -- Around 50 NFL players are arrested on average every year. Since 2000, the Kansas City Chiefs have supplied 41 of those arrests, tied for fourth in the league. NFL player arrests include 129 cases of domestic violence, 120 assault or battery cases, and even a handful of murder and homicide cases. The… […]
    • When living in mom's basement is a GOOD idea
      Dear Dave, I'm in college full-time right now, and my parents have been generous enough to pay for some of my school expenses. In addition, they let me live at home while I complete my degree. I work some nights and most weekends so I can go to school debt-free, but I'm trying to figure… […]
    • A chilling reality
      The post A chilling reality appeared first on WND.
    • The Democrats' journey
      The post The Democrats' journey appeared first on WND.
  • Enter My WorldView