Donald Trump has had a lot going on. Impeachment at home, a re-election campaign picking up speed, trade tensions with China, military tensions with Iran, plus bubbling issues in Syria, Libya and Afghanistan.
So it's not surprising that, after an end-year bout of mutual mud-slinging, North Korea seems to have slipped down the White House's priority list. Years of talks, including two summits, haven't shown much progress curtailing Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions.
That doesn't mean North Korea can't make trouble for the U.S. president as he moves into high gear for the election. Kim Jong Un's regime might be secretive and isolated, but it doesn't like being ignored. Above all, Kim wants international recognition of North Korea as a nuclear state and a seat at the table with the bigger players.
North Korea has a long history of doing dramatic things to force countries to interact with it or to give it economic concessions.
There are signs it has quietly restarted some mothballed nuclear operations. It has refrained from testing very long-range missiles (that, in theory, could hit the U.S.), but that doesn't mean it won't if it really wants Trump's attention.
There are other clues Pyongyang is ready to shake things up. It has reportedly replaced its foreign minister — who'd been in the role since 2016 — with Ri Son Gwon, a former army officer. That could suggest a harder line ahead.
— Rosalind Mathieson
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