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6 countries have a stake in Trump's meeting with Kim Jong Un — here's what all the big players want in coming North Korea talks

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Donald Trump Kim Jong Un

After President Donald Trump confirmed in early March that he would meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the world has been eagerly watching to see what will happen.

If the potential meeting were to happen, six countries in particular — the US, North Korea, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan — will look to benefit from it. 

Although press secretary Sarah Sanders said on Tuesday that there is "no time or date" yet for a potential meeting between Trump and Kim, US officials have said that the talks might happen in May or June. 

"I'm going to be cautiously optimistic that a meeting will actually happen," Rodger Baker, Stratfor's vice president of Asia-Pacific Analysis, told Business Insider. Baker said he thought it was a good decision for Trump to meet with Kim, adding that the only downside to the two speaking could be a return to the bellicose rhetoric the world witnessed in 2017.

Business Insider spoke with Baker about what the six parties would like to see from the potential meeting.

Here's what he said:

SEE ALSO: The US will send an F-35 aircraft carrier to South Korea — and North Korea should be afraid

1. North Korea

Kim's ultimate goal is to "gain international legitimacy, which gets them access to money, resources, finance, investment, infrastructure development, technology for their own industry, markets for their own products," Baker said.

"It's moving them more and more into the space of a normal and recognized country," he said, adding that they've taken a hard stance against the US out of fear that the Americans may renege on any potential compromise in the future and overthrow the Kim dynasty.



2. United States

"The stated policy of the United States, no matter which administration, is the complete verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of North Korea," Baker said.

"What does the president want versus what does the core interest of the United States versus what is the ideal for many of the individuals in the administration or State Department — I don't there's a single agreed outcome at the moment," he said, adding "that's what's making it challenging on the US side and why you hear sort of very conflicting views on whether Trump should or shouldn't go and what may or may not come from it."

In the first potential rounds of talks, Baker said, the US would like to see "the North Koreans publicly stating and then following through with ending intermediate and long-range ballistic missile tests, publicly stating and following through with an end to nuclear tests ... in return for additional talks and the potential to ease back on ... restrictions to humanitarian aid and maybe even infrastructure development aid."



3. China

China is focused on the "technology transfer, manufacturing transfer, infrastructure development in North Korea to facilitate the economic development of North Korea," Baker said. 

"This is something China has been pushing for awhile, that if North Korea can be focused on its economic structure then — yeah, they may still have nuclear weapons here and there, but in general they are not going to be causing a lot chaos right there on the border," he said. 

"The Chinese top-tier concern is actually the collapse of North Korea," according to Baker, adding it would cause hundreds of thousands of refugees would flow into China, possibly bringing loose North Korean missiles and nuclear weapons.

To ensure this doesn't happen, China would like the sanctions to be eased to "create the space for some form of engagement" and for economic activity to pick up.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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