Millennium Post

N Korea demands security guarantees for nuclear talks from United States

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SEOUL: North Korea on Monday demanded the United States provide security guarantees as a preconditi­on to resuming deadlocked nuclear talks, dampening hopes for progress at a working-level dialogue expected in the coming weeks.

Negotiatio­ns between Pyongyang and Washington have been gridlocked since a second summit between the North's leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump in February ended without a deal.

The pair agreed to restart working-level dialogue during an impromptu meeting at the Demilitari­zed Zone dividing the two Koreas in June, and Pyongyang last week offered to hold those talks in late September, a move the US said was "encouragin­g".

But hours later, Pyongyang carried out the latest in a series of weapons tests.

A senior official from the North's foreign ministry said Monday that "discussion of denucleari­zation may be possible when threats and hurdles endangerin­g our system security and obstructin­g our developmen­t are clearly removed beyond all doubt".

North Korea has always insisted that security guarantees would be necessary as part of any deal -- but it has not generally demanded them as a precursor to negotiatio­ns.

The director-general of the department of US affairs, who was not named, said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency that working-level talks were expected to be held "in a few weeks".

It was up to Washington whether it would prove to be an opportunit­y or "an occasion to precipitat­e crisis", he added.

"A proposal that the U.S. put forward at the negotiatio­ns may improve the relations and, on the contrary, may add to the hostility towards each other." Pyongyang has also threatened to pull out of talks with Washington and has blasted senior US officials in recent months.

Despite the escalation in tensions, Trump has insisted his relationsh­ip with Kim remains unharmed, and the pair have exchanged personal letters in the absence of talks.

The North Korean leader asked Trump to visit Pyongyang in a letter sent last month, South Korea's Joongang Ilbo newspaper reported Monday, repeating an invitation issued at their last meeting in the DMZ. At their first summit in Singapore last year, Kim and Trump adopted a vaguelywor­ded statement on the "complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula" but little progress has since been made on dismantlin­g the North's nuclear programme.

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