Before the leaders of two adversarial nations sit down for sensitive negotiations, the diplomatic legwork is generally exhaustive. Key areas of discussion are addressed in detail long before talks are even announced.
Which made it all the more bizarre when South Korean officials told Donald Trump that North Korea’s Kim Jong-un wanted a face-to-face chat, and the American president quickly accepted without any planning or forethought.
CNN had a report yesterday that suggests it’s dawning on some U.S. officials that the president’s approach — leaping, then looking — may have been unwise.
The Trump administration wants additional high-level talks with North Korea and assurances from Kim Jong Un that he is committed to giving up his nuclear program before next month’s planned historic summit in order for the meeting to go ahead, a senior administration official involved in planning for the talks told CNN.
“We need to have more conversations about what we would be talking about before we know if this is going to be useful,” the official said.
Yes. Exactly. Read that quote again: “We need to have more conversations about what we would be talking about before we know if this is going to be useful.”
That’s what a sensible president would’ve said to his team before announcing bilateral talks with the dictator of a rogue nuclear state.









