Trump Kim talks: What to make of the Hanoi summit collapse

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightReutersImage caption See you at the next summit The second summit between US President
Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has ended without any deal or agreement.Washington insists though that dialogue with
Pyongyang will continue and the collapse of the Hanoi summit is not a major disappointment
Here's a roundup of North Korea experts looking at the summit and what to make of its sudden end
A predictable 'no deal'Ankit Panda, senior editor, The DiplomatThe "no deal" outcome could have been seen coming a mile away
Indeed, a serious reading of public North Korean statements since last year's Singapore summit would have revealed the core issue that
resulted in a lack of agreement.The day after the Singapore summit, North Korean state media paraphrased Kim Jong-un as noting Pyongyang
would take "additional good-will measures" if the US took "genuine measures." By that date, North Korea had dismantled its nuclear testing
site at Punggye-ri and announced a moratorium on nuclear tests and intercontinental-range ballistic missile tests.Weeks later, North Korea
would also partially and reversibly dismantle a missile-engine test stand
When Mr Kim met South Korean President Moon Jae-in for a third summit in Pyongyang last September, they referenced North Korea's nuclear
facilities at Yongbyon as an example of something the North would put on the table in exchange for "corresponding measures" from the
US.Finally, on 1 January this year, Kim Jong-un made the same point in his New Year's address: corresponding measures would lead to
progress in the US-North Korea diplomatic relationship
This phrase was misinterpreted to mean any range of US concessions, including a possibly a declaration to end the Korean War, when it really
meant sanctions relief.Image copyrightReutersImage caption All smiles and yet no final deal Critically,
the sequence matters to North Korea: the US would have to agree for sanctions relief up front for any further concessions on
denuclearization to flow
In effect, Yongbyon will remain off the table until the US provides sanctions relief.Donald Trump confirmed this is precisely what caused
the breakdown of talks at his press conference on the second day of the Hanoi summit
As long as Washington remains unwilling to take the first step on sanctions relief, this process will likely remain stuck
The longer it remains stuck, the more likely it is to collapse
Waning momentum in the USJenny Town, managing editor, 38 NorthIt is surprising that they didn't come away with a preliminary deal, as they
clearly had the outline for one going into the final round of pre-summit negotiations
The tone of the press conference was relatively positive, indicating that the administration still sees a way forward and intends to
continue negotiations
That's encouraging for now, while also offering some relief to those who thought the US would accept a "bad deal"
However, in the meantime, no concrete obligations have been placed on either side and I would suspect that offers of confidence building
measures that we've seen coming from North Korea in the past - such as dismantling of the nuclear test site - are unlikely to continue
Of all the stakeholders in this process, the lack of movement on the US-North Korea agenda puts South Korea in a very awkward position,
unable to secure the sanctions exemptions they were hoping for as part of this deal, which would facilitate the resumption of inter-Korean
economic cooperation
Moreover, despite the president's stated will to continue negotiating with North Korea, in the current domestic political environment,
there is a real risk of the momentum for this issue waning amidst a sea of competing interests.Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
Mr Trump might focus more on domestic policies than North Korea's guns The risk for North KoreaAndray
Abrahamian, Stanford UniversityFundamentally, this summit was supposed to kick off a process through which the two countries were going to
try to move to a more win-win relationship, rather than the zero-sum "I win, you lose" frame that has dominated US-North Korea relations
since, well, forever
As such, you have to say that everybody lost.From Mr Trump's perspective it will be a loss he can weather, however
A "bad deal" in which he gave away a lot would inspire years of debate and pushback from US foreign-policy elites
With this, he's spun it as save-able through working-level talks and will head home and the news cycle will move on.This is the risk for
North Korea
Momentum is hard to build between these two countries and there is every chance now that Donald Trump becomes distracted by politics in the
US and this window of opportunity closes
Who knows who the next president will be and what he or she aspires to with North Korea No more 'maximum pressure'Oliver Hotham, managing
editor, NK NewsThat the North Koreans went into this agreement demanding "all sanctions" be lifted, as Trump said, suggests there is an
increasing desperation on the part of Pyongyang for relief, and that they see any other kind of deal as essentially pointless - we'll have
to see their response in the coming day
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption North Korea's economy is suffering severely from the sanctions
It is also a major embarrassment for the South Korean government, which had planned a major announcement on the "Future of Korean peace and
prosperity" tomorrow and had hopes for a major expansion of cooperation with the North in the wake of this summit
China and Russia, too, will be very frustrated with this outcome
The mood in Pyongyang may be tempered, however, by Mr Trump's comments that he will not increase sanctions against the country, and that
he would "love" to see them lifted in the near future
The message is that while no formal relief is going to happen anytime soon, the days of "maximum pressure" are long gone
'Human rights and denuclearization interconnected'Olivia Enos, policy analyst, Asian Studies Center, The Heritage FoundationPresident Trump
made the right decision to walk away from a deal
North Korea's ask to remove all sanctions was untenable and also illegal
According to US and UN sanctions, sanctions cannot be removed until complete, verifiable, irreversible dismantlement of North Korea's
nuclear program takes place and the regime makes human rights improvements
The 80,000 to 120,000 North Korean people inside those prisons camps are being exploited by Kim Jong-un as free labour to fund and architect
his nuclear and missile weapons program
Reports indicate that some may even have chemical and biological weapons tested on them
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption Authorities brutally crack down on any dissent Failure to reach
a deal in Hanoi demonstrates the need to craft a more comprehensive policy toward North Korea one that see human rights and denuclearization
as interconnected
Future diplomacy, if it's even possible, should reflect the multifaceted nature of current US law