Montreal Gazette

Trump casts doubt on June summit with Kim

KOREA MEETING COULD BE DELAYED, AMID SETBACKS

- Zeke Miller and Catherine luCey in Washington

President Donald Trump laboured with South Korea’s Moon Jae-in Tuesday to keep the U.S. summit with North Korea on track after Trump abruptly cast doubt that the June 12 meeting would come off.

Setting the stakes sky high, Moon said that “the fate and the future of the Korean Peninsula hinge” on the meeting.

The summit, planned for Singapore, offers a historic chance for peace on the peninsula — but also the risk of an epic diplomatic failure that would allow the North to revive and advance its nuclear weapons program.

Trump’s newfound hesitation appeared to reflect recent setbacks in efforts to bring about reconcilia­tion between the two Koreas, as well as concern whether the self-proclaimed dealmaker can deliver a nuclear accord with the North’s Kim Jong Un.

In an extraordin­ary public airing of growing uncertaint­y, Trump said “there’s a very substantia­l chance” the meeting won’t happen as scheduled.

Seated in the Oval Office with Moon, Trump said Kim had not met unspecifie­d “conditions” for the summit. However, the president also said he believed Kim was “serious” about negotiatio­ns, and Moon expressed “every confidence” in Trump’s ability to hold the summit and bring about peace.

“I have no doubt that you will be able to … accomplish a historic feat that no one had been able to achieve in the decades past,” Moon said.

U.S. officials said preparatio­ns for the summit were still underway despite recent pessimism — and privately suggested there would be additional public manoeuvrin­g as both sides seek to maximize their leverage. Both parties to the talks are invested in holding the meeting, with Kim seeing an opportunit­y for internatio­nal legitimacy and Trump the prospect of securing Korean stability — and perhaps a Nobel Peace Prize.

“This could be something that comes right to the end and doesn’t happen,” said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. But he added that as of now, “we’re driving on.”

South Korea’s national security adviser put the chance of the summit taking place at 99.9 per cent.

Trump suggested that it could be delayed rather than cancelled: “It may not work out for June 12, but there is a good chance that we’ll have the meeting.”

He did not detail the conditions he had laid out for Kim but said if they aren’t met, “we won’t have the meeting.”

Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump was referring to a commitment to seriously discuss denucleari­zation.

Skepticism about the North’s intentions have mounted in recent weeks after Kim’s government pulled out of planned peace talks with the South last week, objecting to long-scheduled joint military exercises between U.S. and South Korean forces. The North also threatened to abandon the planned Trump-Kim meeting over U.S. insistence on rapidly denucleari­zing the peninsula, issuing a harshly worded statement that the White House dismissed as a negotiatin­g ploy.

Moon sought to project optimism after his meeting with Trump. His spokesman, Yoon Young-chan, told reporters the two leaders agreed to do their best to ensure the meeting happens on June 12. Yoon said Moon told Trump that the North Korean leader was strongly committed to the meeting and the leaders agreed that any assistance to North Korea would come after complete denucleari­zation. High-level talks between the North and South would likely happen after June 25.

Trump expressed suspicion that the North’s recent aggressive barbs were influenced by Kim’s unannounce­d trip to China two weeks ago — his second in as many months. Trump said he’d noticed “a little change” in Kim’s attitude after the trip.

“I don’t like that,” he said. The president added that he hoped Chinese President Xi Jinping was actually committed to the goal of denucleari­zing the Korean peninsula, calling him a “worldclass poker player.” Trump said he was displeased by China’s softening of border enforcemen­t measures against North Korea.

Trump encouraged Kim to focus on the opportunit­ies offered by the meeting and to make a deal to abandon his nuclear program, pledging not only to guarantee Kim’s personal security but also predicting an economic revitaliza­tion for the North.

“I will guarantee his safety, yes,” Trump said, noting that promise was conditione­d on an agreement to complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation. Trump said if such an agreement is reached, China, Japan and South Korea would invest large sums to “make North Korea great.”

A newly released Pentagon report to Congress says North Korea sees nuclear weapons as central to its security, an assessment that would seem to complicate Trump’s effort to persuade Kim to give them up.

The report was delivered to Congress in April, one month after Trump agreed to meet Kim to discuss the North’s denucleari­zation. It was based on the Pentagon’s analysis of North Korea’s military capabiliti­es and strategies through 2017, when it was widely believed in the U.S. government that Kim had no intention of surrenderi­ng his nuclear weapons.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada