National Post (National Edition)

DONALD TRUMP WALKS OUT ON SUMMIT AFTER IMPASSE WITH KIM JONG UN.

Trump, Kim fail to reach agreement

- Ben Riley-smith and nicola Smith The Daily Telegraph

H A NOI, VIETNAM • The Hanoi summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un was abruptly cut short Thursday as the pair failed to reach an agreement over how North Korea should reduce or dismantle its nuclear program.

A working lunch and signing ceremony, which had been pre-announced by the White House, were cancelled at the last minute as the talks in Vietnam hit a sudden impasse at around midday.

Trump said Kim, the North Korean leader, had insisted all economic sanctions against his country be lifted, while not agreeing to give up his entire nuclear arsenal — a position the U.S. president could not accept.

“Sometimes you just have to walk,” Trump told a press conference, adding that he did not want to sign a bad deal. No new summit date was agreed upon.

He insisted that progress had been made and that he and Kim shook hands and remained on good terms.

Trump said Kim had agreed not to restart nuclear and missile tests and the U.S. would not restart military exercises in South Korea — a continuati­on of the status quo.

The failure to make progress in the talks disappoint­ed U.S. allies. A spokesman for South Korea’s president called it “regrettabl­e.”

Trump also drew criticism at home by admitting he took Kim “at his word” when the dictator said he had not known of the imprisonme­nt and torture of Otto Warmbier, which led to the death of the American student in 2017. “I don’t believe he knew about it. He felt very badly about it,” Trump said.

The comments, which recalled the president’s support for authoritar­ian regimes in Saudi Arabia and Russia, were rebuked by Democrats and Republican­s.

Adam Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the house intelligen­ce committee, described the remarks as “detestable,” while Rob Portman, a Republican senator, said “we should never let North Korea off the hook” for Warmbier’s death.

The first sign that the talks had gone wrong came as reporters waited for the leaders and their teams to arrive for lunch in an elegant dining room at the Metropole, the French colonial-era hotel that had hosted the summit.

Name cards had already been laid out on eight empty chairs and bouquets of flowers placed on the pristine white tablecloth in anticipati­on of the dishes to come. The lunch was first delayed, then suddenly cancelled.

Outside the Metropole, Kim’s stern league of bodyguards sprang into action, jumping into moving cars as his cavalcade roared off into Hanoi.

Confusion reigned for 20 minutes until a statement from Sarah Sanders, the White House spokeswoma­n.

Trump and Kim had enjoyed “very good and constructi­ve meetings” while discussing “various ways to advance denucleari­zation and economic-driven concepts,” she said. However, “no agreement was reached at this time.”

The statement was a dramatic twist to a morning that had begun in such a promising way. Kim and Trump had greeted each other warmly as they reconvened their talks at 9 a.m. after dining the previous evening on grilled steak and pear kimchi.

Their discussion had been “great” and they had “developed something special,” said a buoyed Trump.

Kim, treated as an unapproach­able deity in North Korea, took the unpreceden­ted step of answering a question from a foreign journalist for the first time, telling the Washington Post that he anticipate­d “good results” from the day ahead.

The two leaders, their strong personal chemistry on show since the start of the summit, strolled briefly for the cameras through the hotel’s leafy courtyard before getting down to serious business.

The camaraderi­e continued during a midmorning briefing to reporters about their progress.

Kim answered more questions, confirming that he was willing to denucleari­ze and was discussing “concrete steps” with Trump.

Both leaders talked up the possibilit­y of opening diplomatic liaison offices to build trust between their countries. The consistenc­y of the positive messaging made the failure to reach any form of deal more surprising.

At a press conference, Trump pinned the lack of an agreement on the North Korean leader’s stubborn insistence that all sanctions be lifted.

“Basically they wanted the sanctions lifted in their entirety and we weren’t prepared to do that,” he said. However, that statement was contradict­ed in a highly unusual late-night news conference by North Korea’s foreign minister.

Ri Yong-ho said Pyongyang had only requested “partial relief ” on sanctions that “cripple the livelihood of our people” and offered to dismantle uranium enrichment facilities in return. The U.S., he said, had demanded more and hence the talks collapsed.

Choe Son-hui, the viceforeig­n minister, added that the “U.S. not accepting our proposal is missing an opportunit­y that comes once in a thousand years.” Striking a pessimisti­c tone, she said Kim “may have lost the will” to negotiate with Trump.

The U.S. was at pains to stress that talks with North Korea had not collapsed. Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state who was present at the negotiatin­g table, stressed that “we are certainly closer today than we were 36 hours ago.”

CERTAINLY CLOSER TODAY THAN WE WERE 36 HOURS AGO.

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