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BANGKOK, Thailand -- North Korea's Kim Jong Un learned from Saddam
	Hussein and Moammar Gadhafi that nuclear weapons protect his survival,
	and will disarm only if President Trump withdraws American forces and
	ends the U.S.-South Korea defense treaty, said James Trottier who led
	diplomatic efforts in Pyongyang.
	
	North Korea agreed to "site closure, & no more testing!" Mr. Trump
	tweeted on April 23 after Pyongyang announced on April 21 it would
	halt developing and testing nuclear weapons.
	
	Pyongyang however made no mention of dismantling thermonuclear
	warheads and developmental ICBMs it supposedly possesses.
	
	"North Korea views its nuclear capacity as a deterrent, not as a means
	to launch a suicidal strike resulting in their total destruction. The
	North Koreans are not jihadists seeking some afterlife," Mr. Trottier
	said.
	
	"For Kim, basically nuclear weapons are key to his survival. He's
	learned the lessons of Saddam Hussein and Moammar Gadhafi -- what
	happens when WMDs [weapons of mass destruction] are bargained away."
	
	When Mr. Trottier was accredited to North Korea he led four Canadian
	diplomatic delegations to Pyongyang in 2015 and 2016.  He was also a
	diplomatic liaison officer to U.S./U.N. Forces in South Korea.
	
	The former career Canadian diplomat directed political and economic
	diplomacy at Canada's embassies in South Korea and Southeast Asia, and
	served at Canada's permanent mission to the United Nations in New
	York.
	
	"The only remote possibility for this [total denuclearization] would
	be at a price that would probably be politically unacceptable to the
	U.S. and its allies," said Mr. Trottier who is now a lawyer and
	Canadian Global Affairs Institute fellow.
	
	"It's the 'security guarantee' part which the North Koreans mentioned
	to the South Koreans, which always seems to be dropped from the [news]
	coverage of the Trump-Kim upcoming summit."
	
	To satisfy Mr. Kim, that guarantee must include withdrawal of U.S.
	forces from the Korean peninsula and cancellation of the
	Washington-Seoul mutual defense treaty.
	
	Previous U.S. presidents rejected those North Korean proposals.
	
	Major fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War by the U.S., North Korea and
	other forces ended with the peninsula partitioned by an armistice,
	without a peace treaty between Washington and Pyongyang.
	
	In recent months, Mr. Kim denounced Mr. Trump as a senile, elderly
	"dotard" while the U.S. president mocked the North Korean leader as
	"little rocket man."
	
	"Kim Jong Un and the North Korean leadership are not irrational. On
	the contrary, they are coldly rational and committed to the regime's
	survival by making North Korea a nuclear weapons state," Mr. Trottier
	said, speaking at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand during
	a recent analysis of a Trump-Kim summit.
	
	The north's vulnerability is its ruined economy, shattered by U.S.-led
	international sanctions.
	
	To ease sanctions, Mr. Kim may be now agreeing to pause development
	and testing new nuclear weapons while deeper issues are tackled later.
	
	"There is no good military option for the U.S.," Mr. Trottier warned.
	
	"A major pre-emptive [U.S.] strike on North Korea would result in a
	retaliatory attack on South Korea -- on Seoul and possibly beyond --
	with the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Koreans, billions of
	dollars in damage in South Korea and a risk of a full-scale war.
	
	"With North Korea's thousands of conventional artillery pieces,
	camouflaged in mountains within 60 kilometers (37 miles) from Seoul,
	it's very unlikely that American and South Korean bombers could
	destroy these batteries before they've laid waste to much of Seoul,"
	Mr. Trottier said.
	
	To ease tensions, Pyongyang could downplay its existing nuclear
	weapons, said Balazs Szalontai, a Seoul-based Korea University
	associate professor of North Korea's foreign policies.
	
	"The U.S. and South Korea might try to persuade North Korea to behave
	like those medium nuclear powers that possess deliverable nuclear
	weapons but rarely, if ever, make any threats and generally don't even
	mention their nuclear capability in their ordinary interactions with
	other states -- like Britain and France," Mr. Szalontai said in an
	interview.
	
	"Those countries would be also absolutely unwilling to dismantle their
	nuclear weapons, but their neighbors have no reason to regard them as
	a nuclear threat," he said.
	
	"In South Korean political psychology, there is also a deeply embedded
	fear of U.S. abandonment, rooted in the memory of the Korean War. As
	many or most South Koreans see it, the 1949 withdrawal of U.S. troops
	was the factor that encouraged North Korea to launch an attack in
	1950.
	
	"Such fears were periodically revived in the 1960s and 1970s whenever
	the U.S. planned or actually implemented a partial troop withdrawal,
	or reacted passively to Pyongyang's confrontational acts," Mr.
	Szalontai said.