The Province

Sanctions stay

U.S. demands proof N. Korea nukes gone

- JOSH LEDERMAN and CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

BEIJING — The United States will not ease sanctions against North Korea until it denucleari­zes, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Thursday, as he reassured key Asian allies that President Donald Trump had not backed down on Pyongyang’s weapons program.

Pompeo, meeting in Seoul with top South Korean and Japanese diplomats, put a more sober spin on Trump’s summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un after the president’s comments fuelled unease in Washington, Tokyo and Seoul.

He said Trump’s curious claim that the North’s nuclear threat was over was issued with “eyes wide open,” and brushed off a North Korean state media report suggesting Trump would grant concession­s even before the North fully rids itself of nuclear weapons.

“We’re going to get denucleari­zation,” Pompeo said in the South Korean capital. “Only then will there be relief from the sanctions.”

Diverging from the president, Harry Harris, Trump’s choice to become ambassador to South Korea, said the U.S. must continue to worry about the nuclear threat from North Korea.

However, Harris, the former commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, endorsed Trump’s plan to pause major military exercises with the South, saying the U.S. is in a “dramatical­ly different place” from where it was a year ago.

Pompeo emphasized that the drills, which North Korea claims to be preparatio­n for a northward invasion, could still be resumed if the mercurial Kim stops negotiatin­g in good faith.

The words of reassuranc­e from Pompeo came as diplomacy continued at an intense pace after Tuesday’s summit in Singapore, the first between a sitting American president and North Korea’s leader in six decades of hostility.

Pompeo flew from Seoul to China’s capital, Beijing, later Thursday for a meeting with President Xi Jinping, whose country is believed to wield considerab­le influence with North Korea as its chief ally and economic lifeline.

“I also want to thank China and President Xi for his role in helping bring North Korea to the negotiatin­g table,” Pompeo told reporters.

Pompeo thanked Beijing for its continuing efforts to help achieve the “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of North Korea.” He said both sides had agreed that sanctions would not be eased until that’s achieved.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi described the Singapore summit as having “great historic significan­ce” with the potential to lead to “enduring peace.” Wang said the U.S. should continue to “work through China.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Mike Pompeo, left, shakes hands with Xi Jinping in Beijing yesterday. Inset, North Korean tyrant Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump meet earlier this week.
— GETTY IMAGES Mike Pompeo, left, shakes hands with Xi Jinping in Beijing yesterday. Inset, North Korean tyrant Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump meet earlier this week.
 ?? — AP FILES ??
— AP FILES

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