Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Trump says Kim summit may be on China urges US, North Korea to ‘show goodwill’

‘NICE STATEMENT’ N Korea issues conciliato­ry note after US prez cancels meet

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@htlive.com

WASHINGTON: In a stunning reversal, US President Donald Trump on Friday said his officials are back in touch with North Korean and a summit with Kim Jong Un, which had cancelled just the previous day, could still take place on June 12.

“We’ll see what happens,” Trump told reporters when asked about the summit. “We’re talking to them now. It was a very nice statement they put out. We’ll see what happens.”

He added: “It could even be the 12th (of June). We’re talking to them now. They very much want to do it. We’d like to do it. We’re going to see what happens.”

Trump had called off the summit on Thursday, accusing North Korea of “displaying tremendous anger and open hostility”. But he left the door open for the meet, saying if Kim changed his mind, he could “call me, or write”.

North Korea did issue a conciliato­ry statement later, in which Kim Kye Gwan, a top foreign ministry official said: “We would like to make known to the US side once again that we have the intent to sit with the US side to solve problem(s) regardless of ways at any time.”

The official also went on to praise Trump for “having made the bold decision, which any other US presidents dared not, and made efforts for such a crucial event as the summit”.

Trump seemed mellowed by that, later tweeting: “Very good news to receive the warm and productive statement from North Korea. We will soon see where it will lead, hopefully to long and enduring prosperity and peace. Only time (and talent) will tell!”

It wasn’t clear yet if the summit is still on or whether it will be

We hope both the DPRK and the US can cherish the recent positive progress, stay patient, show goodwill, move in the same direction and continue to stay committed to promoting the denucleari­sation of the (Korean) peninsula

LU KANG , Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on

reschedule­d.

Trump personally dictated the letter to Kim on Thursday, in which he had called off the meeting, amid growing signs of skittishne­ss from Pyongyang accompanie­d by an alarming rise in sharp rhetoric.

Last week a team of US officials hoping to hold preparator­y talks with North Korean officials was left waiting in Singapore. A senior White House official said: “The North Koreans didn’t tell us anything, they simply stood us up.”

The official also spoke of “broken promises” on the part of North Koreans.

There were also reports that Trump decided to call off the meeting to pre-empt a North Korean withdrawal, and to avoid looking strung along and abandoned by Kim.

Roadblocks had begun pop- ping up as demonstrat­ed by the US team being stood up in Singapore at a meeting arranged by secretary of state Mike Pompeo, the senior-most official to have been in direct contact with Kim.

Pompeo, who read out Trump’s letter at the start of his hearing before the US Senate’s foreign affairs committee, had sought to reassure lawmakers that the administra­tion was prepared to go through with the talks. But he couldn’t conceal his frustratio­n.

“Over the past many days, we have endeavoure­d to do what chairman Kim and I had agreed, which was to put teams, preparatio­n teams together to begin to work to prepare for the summit — and we have received no response to our inquiries,” he said.

That was an alarming admission from the top American negotiator with North Korea, reflect- ing growing unease about the talks on both sides.

His spokespers­on Heather Nauert told reporters on Friday they had anticipate­d problems. “We always knew there would be twists and turns leading up to this meeting on June 12. We never expected it to be easy, so none of this comes as a surprise to us.”

The conciliato­ry note struck by Pyongyang may have been reassuring, with the North Korean foreign ministry official addressing Trump’s complaint about “tremendous anger and open hostility”.

“As for the ‘tremendous anger and open hostility’ referred to by President Trump, it is just a reaction to the unbridled remarks made by the US side, which has long pressed the DPRK unilateral­ly to scrap nuclear programme ahead of the DPRK-US summit,” the official said. BEIJING: China on Friday urged the US and North Korea to be patient and show goodwill, hours after President Donald Trump cancelled a planned summit with Kim Jong Un.

Beijing had backed the summit and was possibly taken unawares with the cancellati­on following heated exchanges between Washington and Pyongyang this week.

“The recent easing situation on the peninsula is hard won, the political settlement process is faced with a rare historic opportunit­y,” foreign ministry spokespers­on Lu Kang said at the regular ministry briefing on Friday.

Lu noted that both countries had left the door ajar to holding talks. “We believe as the parties directly engaged on the issue, the summit of the DPRK (North Korea’s formal name) and US can play a crucial role for promoting the denucleari­sation of the peninsula,” he said.

Expectedly, China’s official statements were adequately neutral about the cancellati­on and didn’t give any i ndication whether it would i mpact Us-china ties, which have recently been strained over a looming trade dispute.

China is North Korea’s key ally and economic benefactor and is certain to have played a crucial role in the evolving ties between Washington and Pyongyang.

Kim met President Xi Jinping twice in less than 40 days as Us-north Korea ties seemed to thaw.

“China actually has played the role of hidden guarantor for the North Korea-united States summit, so China will continue to promote this meeting,” Sun Xingjie, an expert on North Korea at the Jilin University, told the People’s Daily Overseas Edition, an official Communist Party of China paper.

“The renewed confrontat­ion between the US and North Korea could threaten peace and stability on the peninsula. It would be wise for both sides to exercise a level of restraint and avoid using excessive action against one another,” nationalis­tic tabloid Global Times said in an editorial.

 ?? AP ?? Protesters in Seoul during a rally to denounce US policies against North Korea on Friday.
AP Protesters in Seoul during a rally to denounce US policies against North Korea on Friday.

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