Business Standard

Pompeo seeks UN support forN Korea sanctions

- BLOOMBERG

US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo sought to shore up support among UN Security Council members for a North Korean sanctions regime that’s showing signs of weakening, as hopes for a quick denucleari­sation agreement with Pyongyang fade.

Standing alongside U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley in New York on Friday, Pompeo said the U.S. expects countries to honour their commitment­s to cut off North Korea’s economy. He reiterated accusation­s that Kim Jong Un’s regime is smuggling in refined petroleum products in order to get around the 500,000 barrel per year quota set by the United Nations Security Council.

“When sanctions are not enforced, the prospects for successful denucleari­sation of North Korea are diminished,” Pompeo said, adding that he and President Donald Trump remain “upbeat” about the possibilit­y that North Korea will give up its nuclear arms.

Senior U.S. officials including Pompeo and Trump argue that their “maximum pressure” campaign is the key reason why Kim has said he’s willing to give up his nuclear weapons, and have insisted that sanctions will remain in place until that process is complete. At the same time, they have said that China, North Korea’s primary economic and diplomatic partner, has slipped in its enforcemen­t of sanctions.

Pompeo said at least 89 illegal ship-to-ship transfers took place in the first five months of this year, making them the “most prominent means” for North Korea to violate sanctions, which are intended to deprive the isolated regime of hard currency.

“The problem that we are encounteri­ng is that some of our friends have decided that they want to go around the rules,” Haley said.

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