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A Trump Nobel Peace Prize? South Korea's Leader Likes the Idea

SEOUL, South Korea -- Several months ago, South Koreans considered President Donald Trump as dangerous as North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, as the two traded threats of nuclear annihilation.

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A Trump Nobel Peace Prize? South Korea’s Leader Likes the Idea
By
CHOE SANG-HUN
, New York Times

SEOUL, South Korea — Several months ago, South Koreans considered President Donald Trump as dangerous as North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, as the two traded threats of nuclear annihilation.

Now, commentators and others in Seoul think Trump deserves a Nobel Prize for helping start the unexpected peace process unfolding on the divided Korean Peninsula. On Monday, South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, said he felt the same.

Moon’s endorsement of a Nobel for Trump, who has faced one ethical scandal after another at home, came as the South Korean leader presided over a meeting of his senior presidential staff Monday. During the meeting, Moon received a telegram from Lee Hee-ho, a former first lady of South Korea, congratulating him for a successful summit meeting with Kim on Friday and wishing him a Nobel Peace Prize.

“It’s really President Trump who should receive it; we can just take peace,” Moon was quoted by his office as saying.

In recent months, Moon and his senior aides have repeatedly thanked Trump for making a rapprochement between the Koreas possible. Trump’s “maximum pressure” approach of tightening the noose around the North with economic sanctions and military threats was largely responsible for forcing Kim to the negotiating table, they said.

If they were genuinely grateful to Trump, they were also seen as stoking the ego of the impulsive U.S. leader so that he would continue to support South Korea’s efforts to resolve the North Korean crisis through dialogue.

On Monday, Trump mentioned in a tweet the possibility of meeting Kim at the border between North and South Korea, where Friday’s meeting between Kim and Moon was held.

Trump has also been eager to take credit for Kim’s shift in behavior as the inter-Korean summit has fanned speculation that he could receive the Nobel Peace Prize.

When Trump held a rally in Michigan on Saturday, his fans chanted “Nobel, Nobel, Nobel!”

“That’s very nice, thank you. That’s very nice,” a visibly flattered Trump said in response. “I just want to get the job done.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a Trump ally who is sometimes critical of the president, said that if Trump “can lead us to ending the Korean War” while “getting North Korea to give up their nuclear program” in a verifiable way, then he “deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and then some.”

But some were skeptical about Trump’s chances — including his own son. “The globalist elite would never give him that win,” Donald Trump Jr. tweeted Friday.

No matter what the likelihood is for Trump’s getting a Nobel, his public image among South Koreans has been improving markedly as the mood on the Korean Peninsula shifts from fears of war to hopes of peace.

During their summit meeting, Kim and Moon agreed to push for talks with Washington to negotiate a peace treaty to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War, an agreement that, to the pleasant surprise of many South Koreans, a usually tempestuous Trump has eagerly endorsed.

Last year, as tensions escalated on the Korean Peninsula, with Trump’s administration openly threatening military action against North Korea, Moon publicly denounced such talk, swearing that no such military action would take place without South Korea’s consent. When Trump visited Seoul in November, weeks after he threatened to “totally destroy” North Korea, protesters took to the streets in Seoul, calling him “a war maniac.”

These days, it is easy to find citizens and political analysts in South Korea who mouth something few would have imagined a few months ago: support for giving Trump, Kim and Moon the Nobel Prize together should they achieve lasting peace.

Such talk reflects rising hopes for coming discussions between Trump and Kim, the first summit meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea, which could happen by early June.

Skeptics, however, say that Kim might be duping Moon and Trump into a false peace.

To whet Kim’s appetite for a deal, Moon on Friday handed Kim a computer thumb drive that contained detailed plans to rebuild the North’s decrepit economy if Kim denuclearizes his country, aides to Moon said.

And when Kim talked alone with Moon, without aides, he sought Moon’s advice for his coming talks with Trump, they said. Moon found Kim forthright and courteous, they said.

Still, the prospect that Kim could even be considered for a Nobel is likely to alarm human rights activists. He has been accused of ruthlessly executing scores of aging generals and party elite members, including his own uncle. Kim has also been accused of masterminding the fatal poisoning of his half brother.

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