South Korea welcomes Trump with its highest award, a golden crown and ketchup
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South Korean President Lee Jae Myung with US President Donald Trump on Oct 29. In front of Mr Lee is a replica of the golden Cheonmachong crown.
PHOTO: EPA
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GYEONGJU – South Korea welcomed US President Donald Trump on Oct 29 with a replica gold crown and awarded him with the “Grand Order of Mugunghwa”, the country’s highest decoration, the presidential office said.
Mr Trump landed in South Korea on the final leg of a trip through Asia that also saw stops in Malaysia Chinese President Xi Jinping
US and South Korean warplanes escorted Air Force One on approach, and on the tarmac a South Korean military band greeted Mr Trump with a rendition of YMCA and guns fired a salute.
Mr Lee is hoping to win concessions from Mr Trump in drawn-out negotiations aimed at lowering US tariffs on South Korea, and has wooed the US president by praising his outreach to North Korea.
Mr Lee’s office said that in recognition of Mr Trump’s role as a “peacemaker” on the Korean peninsula, he was awarded the “Grand Order of Mugunghwa”, which is named after South Korea’s national flower, a pink hibiscus also known as the Rose of Sharon in English.
“I’d like to wear it right now,” Mr Trump said when presented with the glittering award. A South Korean official said he was the first US president to receive the honour.
During his first term, Mr Trump held a series of summits with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un before the talks broke down as Pyongyang surged ahead with developing its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.
On Oct 29, Mr Trump repeated his invitation to meet Mr Kim again, but so far North Korea has not commented on his latest overtures
Mr Lee wore a custom made gold-coloured tie, which his office said “reflects President Trump’s taste for gold, captures the golden future of the South Korea-US alliance and the status of South Korea.”
Mr Lee and Mr Trump met at a museum in the city of Gyeongju, a quiet tourist town filled with historic tombs and palaces from its time as the capital of the ancient Silla kingdom, which ruled about a third of the Korean peninsula until the 9th century.
Mr Trump was gifted a replica of the golden Cheonmachong crown. The delicate original, which was found in a tomb in Gyeongju, features towering gold prongs and dangling leaf shapes.
“This symbolises the history of Silla, which maintained a long-term era of peace on the Korean Peninsula, and a new era of peaceful coexistence and common growth on the Korean Peninsula that the United States and South Korea will work together for.”
The leaders had a working lunch that included Thousand Island salad dressing, in what Mr Lee’s office said was a nod to Mr Trump’s “success story in his hometown of New York”. The meal also included local specialties “according to President Trump’s preferences”.
On the menu were “mini beef patties with ketchup”, a “Korean Platter of Sincerity” featuring US beef and local rice and soybean paste, and grilled fish with a glaze of ketchup and gochujang, a red chilli paste.
The lunch was capped by a “Peacemaker’s Dessert” consisting of a brownie adorned with gold.
The day will wrap up with a dinner with the leaders of Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Thailand, and Singapore.
The leaders will be served Trump Chardonnay and Trump Cabernet Sauvignon, from a winery run by Mr Trump’s son Eric Trump, according to Mr Lee’s office.
Three diplomatic sources said some of those leaders changed their schedules to accommodate Mr Trump, who arrived and will leave before the scheduled Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
Gyeongju is not typically the scene for such international events, and foreign diplomats complained of difficulties booking rooms, finding suitable venues for meetings, and having to move staff from Seoul.
On Oct 29, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry disputed reports of room shortages, saying only about half the available accommodation in the area was booked. REUTERS

