US abruptly postpones top-level N Korea talks
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday abruptly shelved plans to meet a top North Korean official in New York, the latest twist in diplomatic attempts to secure a potentially landmark peace deal. The talks between President Donald Trump’s top diplomat and the North Korean delegation, which had been due today, “will now take place at a later
date,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said. “We will reconvene when our respective schedules permit,” she added in a statement. State Department officials gave no further reasons for the delay to the meeting, although North Korea has stepped up its demands that the United States lift sanctions.
The State Department had just one day earlier confirmed that Pompeo would meet in New York with Kim Yong Chol-one of the North Korean leader’s right-hand men-to discuss progress toward a denuclearization pact and to work to arrange a second summit following historic talks between Trump and Kim in June. Despite warm words from Trump since meeting Kim in Singapore, his administration has insisted on maintaining pressure on Pyongyang until a final agreement is reached. North Korea said last week
that it would “seriously” consider returning to a state policy aimed at building nuclear weapons unless Washington lifts sanctions.
“The improvement of relations and sanctions are incompatible,” said a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency. “What remains to be done is the US corresponding reply,” it added. Pompeo, speaking Sunday on Fox News, said he was “not worried” about the North Korean demands and insisted there would be “no economic relief until we have achieved our ultimate objective.” But Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told AFP that the postponement was a bad sign. “This last-minute announcement of a delay is not a good signal as it indicates negotiations were not going well enough to go ahead with the planned meeting,” he said.
Pompeo has traveled four times this year to North Korea, for decades a US pariah, in hopes of securing an accord. The diplomacy comes a year after fears mounted of war, with Trump threatening “fire and fury” after Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests. Trump has cast North Korea as a crowning diplomatic achievement and is eager for a fresh summit with Kim at which the two may formally declare an end to the 1950-53 Korean War.
North Korea has long sought US recognition as a nuclear state and guarantees for the survival of the generational Kim regime, which human rights groups consider one of the most repressive in the world. US critics say that North Korea has yet to make any concrete concessions and it has rejected demands for what it described as its “unilateral disarmament”. — AFP