The Jerusalem Post

Pompeo sees hard road ahead but pursues N. Korean denucleari­zation talks

Secretary of State tells Japan’s PM he raised abductees issue in Pyongyang

- • By DAVID BRUNNSTROM and TIM KELLY

TOKYO (Reuters) – US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo brushed off North Korean charges that he used “gangster-like” diplomacy in negotiatio­ns in Pyongyang, saying on Sunday after meeting his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts that he would continue to pursue denucleari­zation talks with North Korea.

Pompeo said in Tokyo there was still a lot of work to do, but he was confident North Korean leader Kim Jong Un would stick to a commitment to abandon nuclear weapons he made during a summit with US President Donald Trump in Singapore last month.

Pompeo’s meeting with Japan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Taro Kono and South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha followed his two days of talks in Pyongyang that ended on Saturday.

“When we spoke to them about denucleari­zation, they did not push back,” Pompeo told a news conference. “The road ahead will be difficult and challengin­g, and we know that critics will try to minimize the work that we’ve achieved.”

Pompeo spoke after North Korea said the talks “brought us in a dangerous situation where we may be shaken in our unshakable will for denucleari­zation, rather than consolidat­ing trust.”

The statement was carried by the official KCNA news agency on Saturday, soon after Pompeo left Pyongyang, raising questions about the future of the talks in which he is trying to persuade North Korea to give up a nuclear weapons program that threatens the United States.

Kim made a broad commitment in Singapore to “work toward denucleari­zation” but did not give details on how or when he would dismantle North Korea’s nuclear program. Trump in turn offered security guarantees to Pyongyang and pledged a halt to large-scale military drills with South Korea.

North Korea’s latest comments, which came after Pompeo said talks had made progress, were a reminder of the difficulti­es that previous US administra­tions have had negotiatin­g with the reclusive state.

Leaked US intelligen­ce findings have concluded that North Korea does not intend to give up its nuclear program completely.

Pompeo said he did not meet Kim on his latest visit to Pyongyang, as he had done twice before, and he had not anticipate­d doing so. The White House said before the trip that he would meet Kim. IN A SPEECH later on Sunday in Vietnam, Pompeo urged North Korea to follow that country’s example, saying he believed Pyongyang could replicate Hanoi’s path to normal relations with Washington and to prosperity.

“The United States has been clear on what we seek from North Korea... The choice now lies with North Korea and its people,” Pompeo said in Hanoi.

“If they are able to do this, they will be remembered – and Chairman Kim will be remembered – as a hero of the Korean people.”

Some analysts have expressed alarm that the talks appear to have run into difficulti­es, although others see a possible North Korean negotiatin­g ploy.

Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said on Twitter there was a danger military action could be called for, because Trump might now claim he had tried diplomacy but was betrayed by Kim.

“But a rushed summit and demands that NK denucleari­ze in short order or else is not a serious test of diplomacy,” Haass tweeted.

Japan’s Kono thanked Pompeo and said the three allies had reaffirmed a commitment to keep sanctions on North Korea until it abandons nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles of all ranges.

“We confirmed that security assurances will be provided to North Korea as agreed in the summit. At the same time we have reaffirmed that the internatio­nal community will continue to fully implement relevant UN Security Council resolution­s,” Kono said.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe earlier at his residence in Tokyo praised Pompeo.

“I would like to pay my tribute to the strong leadership you have demonstrat­ed in negotiatin­g with North Korea,” Abe told Pompeo. “This really shows the unwavering bond of the Japan-US alliance.”

South Korea’s Kang said her country did not believe the United States had softened its demands on Pyongyang, as some US officials and analysts have suggested.

“Secretary Pompeo’s visit to Pyongyang this time has taken the first steps,” she said. “We expect this to be followed up by further constructi­ve and productive negotiatio­ns.” POMPEO SAID on Twitter after he met Kono that he was in Tokyo to discuss the US alliance with Japan and the maintainin­g of “maximum pressure” on North Korea, an expression Trump’s administra­tion had backed away from after the Singapore summit.

He said before leaving for Pyongyang that he was seeking to “fill in” details on North Korea’s commitment­s and maintain the momentum toward implementi­ng the Singapore agreement between Trump and Kim.

US intelligen­ce officials earlier told Reuters that Pompeo wanted to agree on at least an initial list of nuclear sites and an inventory that could be checked against available intelligen­ce.

The secretary of state said in Tokyo that he had pushed North Korea on a promise to destroy a missile engine test site.

Pompeo said talks had yielded an agreement to form a “working level” group to oversee day-to-day interactio­ns between the United States and North Korea.

Officials from the two sides would meet next week in Panmunjom, on the border between the two Koreas, to discuss the return of the remains of roughly 7,000 US soldiers missing since the 1950-53 Korean War.

KCNA said Pyongyang had offered to discuss declaring a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War to mark next month’s anniversar­y of the armistice agreement. It said the US side had shown little interest, giving “certain conditions and excuses.”

Pompeo also told Abe he had raised the issue of Japanese people abducted by North Korean agents in the 1960s and 1970s to train its spies.

In addition to demanding that North Korea agree to the complete, verifiable and irreversib­le abandonmen­t of its nuclear weapons and missile programs, Abe has made the return of any abductees still in North Korea or a full disclosure of their fates a condition for providing any major economic assistance.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? US SECRETARY of State Mike Pompeo walks through the streets of Hanoi yesterday.
(Reuters) US SECRETARY of State Mike Pompeo walks through the streets of Hanoi yesterday.

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