Business Standard

Trump says date, place set for N Korea summit

- ROBERTA RAMPTON & STEVE HOLLAND

President Donald Trump on Friday said the date and location have been set for a meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, building suspense for the unpreceden­ted talks, as South Korea said it would oppose a withdrawal of US troops from the area.

The White House has said the first meeting ever between sitting US and North Korean leaders could take place in the coming weeks. Trump is to push North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons.

The demilitari­sed zone, or DMZ, between North and South Korea, and Singapore are among the top choices being considered for the summit. Trump this week expressed a preference for the DMZ but also said Singapore was possible.

The Peace House at the DMZ was the venue for a meeting last month between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

The White House announced that Trump will host Moon at the White House on May 22, in talks aimed at demonstrat­ing allied unity before the Trump-Kim summit.

The Moon visit was announced after Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, met with his South Korean counterpar­t, Chung Eui-yong, at the White House on Friday.

Chung told reporters afterward that it was “unacceptab­le that the issue of the U.S. forces Korea keeps being raised.” The New York Times said Trump had asked the Pentagon for troop withdrawal options, although Trump said it was not true and Bolton called the report “utter nonsense.” “Now, I have to tell you, at some point into the future, I would like to save the money,” Trump told reporters. “But troops are not on the table.”

The White House said in a statement late on Friday that Bolton and Chung said there are no plans to change the US’

South Korea bilateral defense posture.

Trump, a former reality TV star who likes to build suspense about upcoming presidenti­al news, did not give a date or location for the North Korea summit, and White House officials did not immediatel­y provide further clarity.

Trump told the National Rifle Associatio­n’s annual convention in Dallas on Friday that he had toned down his rhetoric in anticipati­on of the talks after labelling Kim “Little Rocket Man” last year and threatenin­g him with “fire and fury.” “I won’t use the rhetoric now,” he said. “Now I’m trying to calm it down a little bit.”

The US government is looking into reports that three Americans arrested in recent

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