‘There will not be any more war’: Korean leaders make historic agreement

‘A NEW HISTORY BEGINS NOW’: It has been a morning of absolutely amazing images beamed and streamed live around the world from the Panmunjom Truce Village. The highly choreographed summit between South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un looked more like a meeting of two old friends than bitter enemies still at war after almost 70 years. South Koreans have been transfixed by the continuous live coverage, many hearing the voice of Kim for the first time.

The magnitude of what was about to happen was foreshadowed by what Kim wrote when he signed a guest book, with the promise that “a new history begins now.”

Among the many indelible moments were the two leaders initial greeting, the portly Kim, in his button-up, lapel-less jacket, and the trim Moon in a western suit with baby blue necktie. Kim walked south stepping across the military demarcation line, the first North Korean leader to do that since 1953. Kim then led Moon back over the line, so he could step foot in the north. And then the two leaders briefly held hands and walked back to the south.

Hours later, 4 a.m. in Washington, 5 p.m. in South Korea, the two could be seen chatting amiably on the blue bridge footbridge in the DMZ. Moon had his back to the camera, but for 20 minutes Kim could be seen smiling, nodding, gesturing.

kim moon

‘THERE WILL NOT BE ANY MORE WAR’: Just about an hour later the two leaders were signing and exchanging a formal document, followed by a warm embrace and smiles all around. At a joint news conference at 5 a.m. Washington time, Moon announced that the two Koreas had agreed to end the state of war that has existed since a 1953 armistice sometime this year with a formal peace treaty.

“There will not be any more war on the Korean Peninsula. The new era of peace has finally opened and we are declaring that,” Moon said. “Today, chairman Kim and I have agreed that a complete denuclearization will be achieved. That is our common goal. We reaffirm that is our goal. … A complete denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula will be starting. And for a complete peace to arrive South and North Korea will collaborate closely. I announce that and also we declare the end of the war and also signing the peace treaty. We will totally end the war on the Korean Peninsula and will establish sound and solid peace on the Korean Peninsula.”

Kim said he could see that “North and South Koreans are the same people,” who “should not be in conflict with each other.”

JOINT GOAL OF DENUCLEARIZATION: A joint statement issued after the talks committed the two Koreas to a joint goal of achieving “a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula through complete denuclearization.” There were no details released on how that ambitious goal would be accomplished, underscoring the daunting diplomacy that lies ahead.

TRUMP REACTS: “After a furious year of missile launches and Nuclear testing, a historic meeting between North and South Korea is now taking place. Good things are happening, but only time will tell!” President Trump tweeted this morning.

A SOBERING COUNTERPOINT: While the two Koreas bask in the warm glow of hope for better relations, the parents of Otto Warmbier have filed a wrongful death lawsuit that underscores North Korea’s status as one of the world’s worst violators of human rights. Warmbier, a University of Virginia student, was held captive in North Korea for more than a year for taking a poster as a souvenir during a college trip to Pyongyang. When the 22-year-old was released he was unresponsive, suffering severe brain damage, and he died days later.

“Otto was taken hostage, kept as a prisoner for political purposes, used as a pawn and singled out for exceptionally harsh and brutal treatment by Kim Jong Un,” Fred Warmbier said in a statement. “Kim and his regime have portrayed themselves as innocent, while they intentionally destroyed our son’s life. This lawsuit is another step in holding North Korea accountable for its barbaric treatment of Otto and our family.”

RIGHT TO WORK: Just hours after being sworn in a secretary of state, Mike Pompeo arrived in Brussels today for a meeting of NATO foreign ministers. Pompeo, who was confirmed by the Senate and sworn in by Justice Samuel Alito on Thursday, will travel to Brussels, Riyadh, Jerusalem and Amman from April 26 to April 30, State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said.

Yesterday, Trump, in his call-in interview with “Fox & Friends” revealed that Pompeo wasn’t expected to meet with Kim during his secret visit to Pyongyang Easter weekend. “He wasn’t supposed to meet with Kim Jong Un but he did,” Trump said. “He, you know, they arranged actually while he was there to say hello. We have incredible pictures of the two talking and meeting, which I would love to release if we can.”

Later White House press secretary Sarah Sanders posted the pictures, and tweeted, “Great to have Secretary Pompeo confirmed. He will do an excellent job helping @POTUS lead our efforts to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula.”

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Good Friday morning and welcome to Jamie McIntyre’s Daily on Defense, compiled by Washington Examiner National Security Senior Writer Jamie McIntyre (@jamiejmcintyre), National Security Writer Travis J. Tritten (@travis_tritten) and Senior Editor David Brown (@dave_brown24). Email us here for tips, suggestions, calendar items and anything else. If a friend sent this to you and you’d like to sign up, click here. If signing up doesn’t work, shoot us an email and we’ll add you to our list. And be sure to follow us on Twitter @dailyondefense.

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HAPPENING TODAY: Trump meets today with German Chancellor Angela Merkel just days after fellow signatory to the Iran Nuclear Agreement French President Emmanuel Macron pressed Trump to stick with the agreement. Merkel will be making a similar argument, but lacks the buddy-buddy relationship Macron enjoys with Trump.

One glance at the White House schedule shows the difference. While Macron had three days of pomp, the circumstances of Merkel’s visit are more modest. A five-minute arrival ceremony, 30 minutes one-on-one with Trump in the Oval Office, followed by a 90-minute working lunch, a 30-minute news conference, and wrapping up at 2:20 p.m. with Merkel’s departure. Just over two hours total.

MATTIS OFF MESSAGE: Twice in his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis appeared to diverge from the policies of his boss, the commander in chief.

On the Iran nuclear deal, Mattis allowed that while he considered the Obama-era deal “an imperfect arms control agreement,” he said the inspection regime is actually “pretty robust,” and seemed to be suggesting that provision alone might make it worth keeping. “Whether or not that is sufficient I think is a valid question,” Mattis said. “I think we need to focus on what is in the best interest of Middle East stability and the threat that Iran poses … with this nuclear program, if [the nuclear deal] does not get extended and maintain the intrusive verification that we need.”

On Syria, Mattis seemed to reject Trump’s idea of having a force of regional troops replace the U.S. ground presence to provide stability after the Islamic State is defeated. “Is it fair to say that a holding force, right now, without us, would be a risky proposition?” asked Sen. Lindsey Graham. “I am confident that we would probably regret it,” Mattis replied.

“President Trump’s right that the Arabs need to pay more and other countries need to contribute more,” Graham said, but then put this question to Mattis: “Do you agree with the following statement? There is really no substitute for the American military when it comes to a holding force. We have capabilities most people don’t.” Mattis replied, “That’s correct, sir.”

BLOCKING F-35s TO TURKEY: A new bill introduced by Sens. James Lankford, Jeanne Shaheen and Thom Tillis would stop the transfer of Lockheed Martin F-35 joint strike fighters to NATO ally Turkey. “President [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan has continued down a path of reckless governance and disregard for the rule of law. Individual freedoms have been increasingly diminished as Erdogan consolidates power for himself, and Turkey’s strategic decisions regrettably fall more and more out of line with, and at times in contrast to, US interests,” Lankford said in a statement. Turkey is looking to buy 100 of the high-tech, fifth-generation fighter jets.

Under the proposed bill, Trump would be able to waive the ban on sales if he can certify to Congress that Turkey is not working in ways that degrade the NATO alliance, buying weapons from countries targeted by U.S. sanctions, and not “wrongfully or unlawfully” detaining U.S. citizens. “Erdogan and his government must abide by the rule of law within his own country and abroad, and release Pastor Andrew Brunson and other Americans unlawfully held in Turkey,” Shaheen said. Brunson has been imprisoned in Turkey since 2016 and was indicted on charges related to terrorism and espionage that 66 senators recently called bogus.

PRESSURE ON BOEING: Rep. Peter Roskam is pushing Boeing to take the final step of canceling an agreement to sell dozens of jetliners to Iran under an agreement reached after the 2015 implementation of the nuclear deal between the regime and leading world powers.

HASC WRAPS MARKUPS: Six House Armed Services subcommittees completed their National Defense Authorization Act markups on Thursday. The details of the bills were released this week. The votes wrap up the first phase of writing the language of the annual defense policy bill and tees up the release of the Chairman’s Mark version slated for May 7. Armed Services will then hold its marathon NDAA amendment session on May 9 where many of the most controversial member proposals will be debated and voted on. We have a detailed breakdown of the markups here.

NIGER LEAK PROBE: Details of the Pentagon’s finished but unreleased investigation into four soldier deaths in Niger were leaked to the press this week, and Rep. Mac Thornberry is not happy about it. The House Armed Services chairman called it an “unconscionable breach of faith” with families of the soldiers who had not yet been fully briefed and said he has ordered an inquiry into whether anyone on his committee leaked the report details. The Pentagon probe found the military made numerous missteps that led to the deadly ambush of the Army unit in October.

“The families who lost loved ones to this tragedy have suffered enough,” he said in a statement. “They deserve the space to process the findings of this investigation before it is debated in the media. No one, whether in the legislative branch or the executive branch of government, has the right to take that space from them.” He said “a number of important oversight issues” remain for the committee and it is awaiting a briefing by U.S. Africa Command.

PUBLIC RELEASE SOON: In his Senate testimony, Mattis confirmed that the investigation found what he called “the crux of the problems — not problem, but problems” that contributed to the deaths. The investigation runs 6,300 pages, with a 200-page classified summary that’s already been given to Congress. Mattis said the last family will be briefed Monday, and results will be made public after that. “It was not a delegation of authority problem,” Mattis said. “So we know immediately how to address and those — we are doing that right now, addressing those problems.”

MATTIS VS. GILLIBRAND: After questioning the service chiefs this month, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand finally faced off with Mattis over his proposed transgender service policy during the Armed Services hearing Thursday. “This seems to me to be the same uninformed and unfounded concerns that led to the opposition to repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, integrating women into the military, integrating African-Americans into the military, and I think you need to do a lot more work on this topic to inform yourselves,” Gillibrand told Mattis. Under her earlier questioning, the service chiefs of the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps each testified they had no reports of issues with morale, unit cohesion or discipline related to transgender troops.

Mattis said, “I regret the way you characterized it.” The service chiefs actually had their hands tied during their testimony by the current Obama administration policy, which prohibits the release of information that could show transgender troops are problematic, Mattis told her. “The questions you’ve asked the service chiefs and the chairman are ones that right now the [former Defense Secretary Ash] Carter policy prohibited that very information from coming up because it is private information … so it’s impossible for them to have responded to you,” he said.

HALF THE SENATE OPPOSES: The policy proposed by Mattis would roll back the Obama administration’s open service and bar transgender people diagnosed with the common condition gender dysphoria from serving. On Tuesday, 49 senators led by Gillibrand wrote a letter to Mattis saying the restrictions would harm the military. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska was the lone Republican to sign. They claim Mattis’ 44-page review and policy recommendation on the new policy misrepresents the scientific consensus on gender dysphoria and falsely claims transgender troops cannot meet military standards.

But Mattis pushed back on Thursday. “If gender dysphoria has anxiety or it has some kind of depression, we don’t let anyone in with that. I would have to make a special category that said you can have these disqualifying factors only if you’re transgender and then we can bring you in,” Mattis said. “I think you can understand why [we] have not chosen to do that.”

HEADS WILL ROLL: A Pentagon contractor accused of misspending about $50 million in taxpayer money on luxury cars, spouse salaries, alcohol and guns is under investigation and will likely face criminal charges, Mattis said Thursday during his Senate Armed Services Committee testimony. “There is the ongoing investigation and because it may — will likely result in criminal charges, we can’t go into a lot of detail in public because we’re not supposed to when something is under investigation,” Mattis said. Sen. Claire McCaskill released a new investigative report that found New Century Consulting is still working as a subcontractor for Raytheon after an Army audit found the array of inappropriate expenses while it was working on a program to train Afghan intelligence officers between 2008 and 2013.

“What is wrong with the debarment process? This is the whip cream and cherry on top of this incredible scandal: They are still a contractor,” McCaskill said. “They are getting taxpayer money as we speak. Why in the world when you have audit evidence of this kind of egregious — I don’t know at what point it becomes criminal or just gross — mismanagement by the Pentagon?” You can see the video of the exchange here. McCaskill said “somebody’s head has got to roll” and requested Mattis turn over a list of Pentagon officials who oversaw the contract.

NAME IN THE MIX: Trump is looking seriously at former House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chair Jeff Miller to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, a senior White House official told the Washington Examiner’s Gabby Morrongiello.

The retired Florida congressman left the House in 2016 after serving eight terms on Capitol Hill, during which he became a major advocate for the nation’s veterans. Miller, a conservative Republican, helped usher a $16 million bipartisan VA reform plan through Congress in 2014 when the agency was beset by scandals.

STILL SECRET AFTER ALL THESE YEARS: Trump agreed Thursday that withholding records related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy should be permitted, pending review of information that could pose concerns to national security.

SILLY STUNT: The United Kingdom on Thursday dismissed as a stunt Russia’s attempt to show that no one died in this month’s suspected chemical attack in Syria. Russia presented 17 Syrians at the headquarters of an international monitor based in Europe to argue that the recently reported chemical weapons attack was staged.

THE RUNDOWN

AFP: Generation gap: South Koreans fear, welcome and ignore the North

Daily Beast: I Got Pills from Ronny Jackson. But That’s Not the Part I Regret.

Defense News: Lawmakers propose creating new US Space Command in defense policy bill

Air Force Times: How the US dropped more munitions in Afghanistan this year than it has since the height of the war

Defense One: The Pentagon’s New R Chief Has a Mandate for Change

Marine Corps Times: Most Navy C-130s remain grounded nearly one year after fatal crash

New York Times: In Talks With Kim Jong-un, South Korean Leader Will Keep One Eye on Trump

The Hill: Report: Pentagon’s own data contradicts recommendations on transgender troops

Foreign Policy: Merkel to Press Trump on Russia Sanctions

Calendar

FRIDAY | APRIL 27

8 a.m. 300 1st Street SE. The Nuclear Deterrent Breakfast Series: Connecting Arms Control to Strategic Deterrent Requirements. mitchellaerospacepower.org

9 a.m. 1030 15th Street NW. Private Sector Investments in Afghanistan. atlanticcouncil.org

10 a.m. 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. Maritime Security in the Polar Regions: Legal Perspectives from the United States and China. wilsoncenter.org

2 p.m. 1740 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies Diversity in the U.S. Military and the Contributions of the Sikh-American Community.

MONDAY | APRIL 30

11:30 a.m. 1667 K St. NW. Book Talk on “Silent Invasion” by Clive Hamilton. csbaonline.org

12 noon. 1201 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. Space 2.0: U.S. Competitiveness and Policy in the New Space Era. hudson.org

1 p.m. 1616 Rhode Island Ave. NW. Book Talk on “Losing Hearts and Minds: American-Iranian Relations and International Education during the Cold War” with author Matthew Shannon. csis.org

2 p.m. 1211 Connecticut Ave. An Assessment of the Inter-Korea Summit: Views from South Korea, U.S. and China. stimson.org

TUESDAY | MAY 1

8 a.m. 300 First Street SE. The Nuclear Deterrent Breakfast Series: The GBSD and B-21/LRSO: Nuclear Deterrent Futures Lt. Gen. Jack Weinstein, Deputy Chief of Staff. mitchellaerospacepower.org

9 a.m. 1779 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Denuclearizing North Korea: Practicalities and Politics. carnegieendowment.org

10 a.m. 1030 15th St. NW. Army Vision and Modernization Priorities with Secretary Mark Esper. atlanticcouncil.org

12:15 p.m. 740 15th St. NW. Iraq After ISIS: What to Do Now. newamerica.org

WEDNESDAY | MAY 2

6:30 a.m. 2425 Wilson Blvd. Institute of Land Warfare Breakfast Series with Lt. Gen. Timothy Kadavy, Director of the Army National Guard. ausa.org

7:30 a.m. 2300 Dulles Corner Blvd. 2018 Spring IPM Division Meeting. ndia.org

8 a.m. 300 First Street SE. The Nuclear Deterrent Breakfast Series: The NPR Challenges with Dave Trachtenberg, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. mitchellaerospacepower.org

9 a.m. 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. Fifth Annual Security Forum on the U.S.-Japan Alliance: Deepening Ties While Confronting New Challenges. spfusa.org

4 p.m. 1616 Rhode Island Ave NW. Annual Meeting of the U.S. Naval Institute with Adm. John Richardson, Chief of Naval Operations. usni.org

THURSDAY | MAY 3

8 a.m. 300 First Street SE. The Nuclear Deterrent Breakfast Series: The Emerging Strategic Environment. mitchellaerospacepower.org

8 a.m. 1667 K St. NW. Workshop: Comparing Defense Innovation in Advanced and Catch-up Countries. csbaonline.org

10 a.m. 1616 Rhode Island Ave. NW. Japan’s Security Strategy: A Political Update from Nagata-cho. csis.org

4 p.m. 1030 15th St. NW. Cyber Risk Thursday: Building a Defensible Cyberspace. atlanticcouncil.org

FRIDAY | MAY 4

9:15 a.m. 1030 15th St. NW. 2018 Atlantic Council-East Asia Foundation Strategic Dialogue, Scaling the Summits: The Future of a Denuclearized Korean Peninsula with Sen. Edward Markey. atlanticcouncil.org

2 p.m. Time for Action in the Western Balkans: Policy Prescriptions for American Diplomacy. usip.org

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QUOTE OF THE DAY
“There will not be any more war on the Korean Peninsula. The new era of peace has finally opened and we are declaring that. Today, chairman Kim and I have agreed that a complete denuclearization will be achieved. That is our common goal. We reaffirm that is our goal … and also we declare the end of the war and also signing the peace treaty.”
South Korean President Moon Jae-in, speaking through a translator, at a joint news conference with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

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