China Daily (Hong Kong)

Kim, Trump express hope, confidence in talks’ success

- By PAN MENGQI in Hanoi and ZHOU JIN in Beijing

The second summit of Democratic People’s Republic of Korea top leader Kim Jong-un and United States President Donald Trump began on Wednesday in Hanoi, Vietnam, with both leaders expressing hope and confidence that this week’s talks will be successful.

The two leaders greeted each other with warm smiles and shook hands for several seconds in front of the flags of their countries at the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi hotel.

Trump said his previous talks with Kim in Singapore were a great success and the Hanoi meeting will “hopefully be equal or greater than the first”. He added their personal relationsh­ip constitute­d the biggest success and told Kim that the DPRK has tremendous economic potential.

Kim said he would do his best to produce a “great outcome” to be welcomed by all people.

The pair started a one-on-one meeting with their translator­s after the photo session. It was followed by a “social dinner” involving some of their top aides.

Two US officials — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Mick Mulvaney, the White House’s acting chief of staff — joined the dinner session, which lasted about an hour and a half. Kim Yong-chol, a senior official of the Workers’ Party of Korea, and DPRK Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho were at the dinner as well.

The session was thought to serve as a tone-setting test for the formal talks scheduled on Thursday morning, which may decide the future of

a peace process that has been stalled since the two leaders’ Singapore summit in June.

On Wednesday, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that Beijing hopes the Hanoi summit between Kim and Trump will take an important step forward to achieve denucleari­zation and establish a peace mechanism on the Korean Peninsula.

“China expects the meeting between leaders of the DPRK and the US will continue moving forward in the direction of the ‘dualtrack’ approach,” Wang said at a news conference after the 16th meeting of the foreign ministers of China, Russia and India in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province.

Analysts have described Kim and Trump’s Singapore summit as focused on breaking the ice to pave the way for full-scale diplomacy on denucleari­zation, improved ties and a formal conclusion to the war on the Korean Peninsula, going beyond the armistice reached in 1953. Now the two nations are facing a more daunting task of attempting to reach specific deals over details, going beyond a vaguely worded joint statement, the analysts said.

Wang Junsheng, an internatio­nal relations expert with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, expressed his optimism about the second summit and said that given the DPRK’s announceme­nt that it would shift its strategic focus to economic developmen­t, the country will likely make concession­s on giving up its nuclear weapons during this summit in exchange for the lifting of sanctions and the declaratio­n of the end of the war.

He said denucleari­zation is an irreversib­le trend.

Also on Wednesday, the Republic of Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House spokesman said, “Whatever concession­s Trump and Kim may make at their upcoming summit will be significan­t as they will mean further progress toward the complete denucleari­zation of Pyongyang.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP ?? United States President Donald Trump and Democratic People’s Republic of Korea top leader Kim Jong-un shake hands following a meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Wednesday.
SAUL LOEB / AFP United States President Donald Trump and Democratic People’s Republic of Korea top leader Kim Jong-un shake hands following a meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Wednesday.

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