The Associated Press: Road to North Korea’s denuclearization littered with failure. The Washington Post: White House privately skeptical of North Korea’s plans to freeze nuclear testing. North Korea has not said it will abandon its development of nuclear technology or its weapons stockpiles. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), a Trump ally, downplayed the announcement, calling it an “easily reversible decision” on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “They made no announcement about their medium- or short-range ballistic missiles that threaten hundreds of thousands of Americans in Korea and Japan, just like it threatens our allies there.” The Wall Street Journal: Trump will tell Kim that nukes must be dismantled before sanctions relief. The Hill: Korean peace talks pose new challenge for Trump. Takeaways: - North Korea has suspended military tests and made promises like this before, only to backtrack.
- The announcement is a short-term victory for Trump, lifting his global credibility. The White House sees evidence of Trump’s impact on events (and potentially his negotiating prowess).
Big questions: - Does Pyongyang’s announcement make a Trump-Kim meeting more likely?
- Is it a head-fake or trap by North Korea to bring Trump to the table?
AP: World watching for signs of North Korea nuke deal at two summits. Dov Zakheim, the former undersecretary of Defense for President George W. Bush, tells us that most of the Western media are focused too much on the Trump-Kim dynamics. Less is known about the impact that North Korea’s regional neighbors, China and South Korea, are having on the process. “The Chinese are playing at least as big a part in all this as we are and it seems something is going on behind the scenes between the North and South to end this conflict.” The New York Times: National security adviser John Bolton taps veteran Mira Ricardel as his White House deputy. Meetings with European peers will dominate Trump’s calendar this week. - Monday: The president welcomes French President Emmanuel Macron today for a three-day state visit including bilateral meetings, a joint press conference, and a formal state dinner.
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- The Associated Press: Macron to push Trump on Iran deal, arguing there’s no “plan B.”
- Bloomberg: The leaders of France, UK and Germany coordinate to urge Trump to stick with Iran nuclear deal.
- Friday: German Chancellor Angela Merkel visits the White House. (No state dinner for her.) Reminder: The U.S. still does not have an ambassador to Germany. Trump’s pick, Richard Grenell, was nominated last September but still has not received a confirmation vote from the GOP-controlled Senate.
CABINET OUTLOOK for State, CIA: Tonight, the Senate Foreign Relations panel will vote on whether Mike Pompeo, a former Republican congressman from Kansas and current CIA director, should become Trump’s second secretary of State. If Pompeo becomes the first such Cabinet pick in decades to lose the committee’s backing, his nomination could still move to the Senate floor, where his chances for confirmation are brighter. The Hill: Pompeo faces pivotal vote. The Hill: The committee vote will show how far Democrats are willing to go to fight the president on nearly every issue. Separately, Trump’s nominee to become CIA director, Gina Haspel, is in trouble leading up to a May 9 Senate confirmation hearing. Haspel, 61, has never held a political appointment and has never testified publicly before the Senate. A broad array of former Republican and Democratic intelligence officials have given her their support. - Much of Haspel’s service record is classified, including her involvement in harsh interrogation of Muslim terror suspects after 9/11, and CIA destruction of interrogation videotapes.
- Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has announced his opposition. With the narrow Senate GOP majority, to win confirmation Haspel would need to find some Democratic votes, which are not yet in evidence.
- Might senators’ unease put pressure on Trump to withdraw his nominee to avoid what could be a bruising defeat?
- Much of Haspel’s service record is classified, including her involvement in harsh interrogation of Muslim terror suspects after 9/11, and CIA destruction of interrogation videotapes. New: Former military officials write in opposition to Haspel.
NBC News: Democrats are publicly outspoken in opposition; Republicans’ concerns are privately shared. Fox News Op-Ed: Why Haspel deserves confirmation by the Senate, by Douglas MacKinnon, former White House and Defense official. |
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