Fiji Sun

Trump ‘knows risks of meeting N Korea’

- BBC Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

CIA director Mike Pompeo has defended Donald Trump’s decision to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, saying the president understand­s the risks.

Mr Trump “isn’t doing this for theatre, he is going there to solve a problem,” the spy chief told Fox News on Sunday.

The president has said the summit could produce the “greatest deal for the world”.

But critics have warned that if the talks go poorly, the two nations will be in a worse position than before. No sitting US president has ever met a North Korean leader.

Mr Trump reportedly accepted the offer to do so on the spot when it was relayed by South Korean envoys on Thursday, taking his own administra­tion by surprise.

Attempts to negotiate aid-for-disarmamen­t deals have failed repeatedly since 2003, when the North pulled out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty (NPT).

Mr Pompeo told CBS the administra­tion had its eyes “wide open” to the challenge of dealing with North Korea.

He said the country was coming to the table now because US-led sanctions have battered it economical­ly.

“Never before have we had the North Koreans in a position where their economy was at such risk, where their leadership was under such pressure,” he told Fox News.

Another top White House official, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, stressed the “clear” objective of the talks was getting rid of nuclear weapons on the Korean peninsula, and restated that the US expects there to be no missile or nuclear test ahead of the meeting.

Fears Kim could ‘take advantage’

Politician­s from both main parties in US politics expressed concerns over the planned meeting, however.

Republican Senator Cory Gardner told CBS he wanted “concrete, verifiable steps toward denucleari­sation” before the talks take place. Another Republican Senator, Jeff Flake, told

NBC he was sceptical about whether denucleari­sation was a realistic goal at all. Speaking to the same channel, Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren raised fears that what she called the “decimated” US State Department lacked officials familiar with Pyongyang’s methods.

“I want to see our president succeed, because if he succeeds, America succeeds. The world is safer. But I am very worried that they’re going to take advantage of him,” she said.

Trump: North Korea ‘wants peace’

At a political rally in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday, Mr Trump told supporters he believed North Korea wanted to “make peace”.

But he said he might leave the talks quickly if it didn’t look like progress for nuclear disarmamen­t could be made.

“Hey, who knows what’s going to happen?” said Mr Trump at the rally for a Republican congressio­nal candidate.

“I may leave fast or we may sit down and make the greatest deal for the world.”

He said he hoped a deal to ease nuclear tensions would happen, particular­ly to help countries like North Korea.

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