Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

N Korea official, Pompeo meet ahead of Singapore summit

NUKES ON THEIR MINDS US has been pushing Kim towards denucleari­sation

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: US secretary of state Mike Pompeo was set to hold talks with visiting North Korean official Kim Yong Chol on Wednesday to prepare for the upcoming Singapore summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un.

The US state department said Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol were to meet in New York on Wednesday and Thursday, bringing forward their Friday meeting. Trump is “expected” to meet Kim in Singapore on June 12 as had been decided earlier, reversing the US president’s sudden cancellati­on of talks last week due to “anger” and “hostility” from Pyongyang.

Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol “will discuss preparatio­ns for (the) expected summit”, the state department said.

Kim Yong Chol is vice chairman of North Korea’s central committee and is considered the right-hand man of Kim Jong Un. He is also a former spy chief who has been accused by Seoul of mastermind­ing the sinking of a South Korean warship in 2010. The US has linked him to the 2014 cyberhacki­ng of Sony Pictures.

US and North Korean officials are also meeting in Singapore to discuss logistics of the TrumpKim meet, as well as at the Demilitari­sed Zone on the Korean peninsula to work on a joint communiqué to be issued at the summit.

These meetings takes place amidst intense discussion­s about possible outcomes of the summit, including denucleari­sation — a key US demand pushed aggressive­ly by Trump. However, he has indicated willingnes­s to consider a phased dismantlin­g in recent days.

On Tuesday, NBC News, quoting a CIA assessment, reported that North Korea is unlikely to give up its nuclear weapons stockpile any time soon but could offer to allow the launch of a western hamburger franchise in Pyongyang as a goodwill gesture.

The report did not name the brand likely to get Kim Jong Un’s nod. His other options could include American investment­s, especially in infrastruc­ture.

A hamburger franchise will be an easy give. And, as NBC reminded its viewers, US President Donald Trump had expressed his desire in 2016 to talk peace with the North Korean leader while “eating a hamburger on a conference table”.

And the world is aware of Trump’s love of burgers – two at a time, pushed down by a chocolate shake for dinner, while campaignin­g.

According to the report, the CIA further says Kim might have wanted to have an establishm­ent up and running by the time of the talks to ensure a steady supply of burgers to the delegation­s involved. But there would be no shortage of the delicacy in Singapore if the city-state does get to host the summit.

The intelligen­ce assessment that Kim may not end the country’s nuclear programme is largely in accord with the assessment of North Korean watchers, who have cautioned against having high expectatio­ns.

“Everybody knows they are not going to denucleari­se,” an official who had read the analysis told NBC News. The report was circulated earlier this month, said an intelligen­ce official.

A Stanford University study has said it could take 15 years to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme. “We’re talking about dozens of sites, hundreds of buildings and thousands of people,” lead author Siegfried S Hecker told The New York Times.

He said the key to dismantlin­g the sprawling atomic complex, begun six decades ago, “is to establish a different relationsh­ip with North Korea where its security rests on something other than nuclear weapons”.

 ?? AP ?? A Stanford University study has said it could take 15 years for Kim Jong Un to dismantle his nuclear ■ weapons programme.
AP A Stanford University study has said it could take 15 years for Kim Jong Un to dismantle his nuclear ■ weapons programme.

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