Trump faking Kim meeting exposed U.S. China strategy
U.S. President Donald Trump played a smart game with the North Korean planned summit that he eventually cancelled.
For all we know, there was no real summit planned, despite all the data that points to a summit in Singapore. It was all drama to unmask the biggest threat against America.
Warmonger John Bolton’s comments that North Korea risks suffering the same fate as Libya gave away the American strategy.
They were not targeting North Korea alone in the first place.
It was a complex story of diversions. And trickeries which are truly American and we try here to explain it the simplest way possible.
There was an end-game to the plans to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and all along it was China.
But how do we know that China is the eventual target in the Trump administration’s strategy?
The dear American leader said it himself: A day before Trump called-off the deal, Trump blamed Beijing for summit setbacks.
The Financial Times said China has always preferred to do diplomacy in quiet back rooms, far away from the public glare.
It suggested that China was behind every move made by Kim. True, it is, but that is not what the American policymakers wanted to ‘discover’.
They knew all along that China was whispering into Kim’s ears on the to-do-and-not-to-do-list.
The U.S. was always interested in exposing China as the culprit in a failed summit.
But with the North readying itself for the summit – that the U.S. did not really want to happen for many reasons – then came in Bolton.
He only had to suggest that Kim will be the next Muammar Gaddafi for the North to get angry.
The anger triggered by Bolton’s statement would give Trump fodder to cannonball the summit, which he did.
But the end-game?
Knocking Kim down will mean weakening China in the run-up to the ‘trade war’ between the US and China.
But Kim was too accommodating. Kim accepting all the terms laid by the Americans sent suspicious vibes to the White House.
With Kim finally blowing-up the nuclear testing sites, Trump was losing the fight.
And China was winning against the odds.
A denuclearised North Korea would mean no chance for the U.S. to take China by the horns over ‘military aggressiveness’ in the Korean peninsula.
And as long as China can keep North Korea alive, the U.S. will remain weak in the South and West China seas.
Then why all this drama about a Kim summit that they did not really want?
This is only the end of round one in the American geopolitical target.
Round two will come at a heavier price for all those involved in this trivia.
A nuclear war – however, targeted it will be – will impact China. It will destroy North Korea for sure, but it will also weaken China’s defence of its far south territory.
It will also allow the U.S. and its allies to have deeper access to the Yellow Sea!