The Borneo Post

Trump says world dodged ‘nuclear catastroph­e’

Accepts invitation from Kim to visit North Korea

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SEOUL: Donald Trump accepted an invitation from Kim Jong Un to visit North Korea during their historic summit, Pyongyang state media reported yesterday, as the US president said the world had jumped back from the brink of “nuclear catastroph­e”.

Critics have said the unpreceden­ted encounter in Singapore was more style than substance, producing a document that was short on details about the key issue of Pyongyang’s atomic weapons.

But in a characteri­stically bullish tweet, Trump said the first-ever meeting between sitting leaders of the two Cold War foes meant “the World has taken a big step back from potential Nuclear catastroph­e!”

“No more rocket launches, nuclear testing or research! The hostages are back home with their families. Thank you to Chairman Kim, our day together was historic!”

In the joint statement following Tuesday’s talks, Kim agreed to the “complete denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula” – a stock phrase favoured by Pyongyang that stopped short of long-standing US demands for North Korea to give up its atomic arsenal in a “verifiable” and “irreversib­le” way.

The official KCNA news agency ran a glowing dispatch, describing the summit as an “epoch-making meeting” that would help foster “a radical switchover in the

No more rocket launches, nuclear testing or research! The hostages are back home with their families. Thank you to Chairman Kim, our day together was historic! Donald Trump, US President

most hostile ( North Korea) - US relations”.

The report said the two men “gladly accepted” mutual invitation­s to visit each other’s countries.

KCNA also asserted Trump had “expressed his intention” to lift sanctions against the North – something the US president had told a blockbuste­r press conference would happen “when we are sure that the nukes are no longer a factor”.

“The sanctions right now remain,” he added.

With the headline: “Meeting of the century opens new history in DPRK-US relations”, the North’s ruling Workers Party official daily Rodong Sinmun splashed no fewer than 33 pictures across four of its usual six pages.

In Pyongyang, commuters crowded round the spread of images, for most of them the first they had seen of the summit.

Pyongyang has reason to feel confident after the meeting, where the leader of the world’s most powerful democracy shook hands with the third generation of a dynastic dictatorsh­ip, standing as equals in front of their nations’ flags.

The spectacle was a major coup for an isolated and heavily sanctioned regime that has long craved internatio­nal legitimacy.

“Kim Jong Un got what he wanted at the Singapore Summit: the internatio­nal prestige and respect of a one- on- one meeting with the American president, the legitimacy of North Korean flags hanging next to American flags in the background,” said Paul Haenle, director of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center.

In his post- summit press conference, Trump made the surprise announceme­nt that the US would halt joint military exercises with its security ally Seoul – something long sought by Pyongyang, which claims the drills are a rehearsal for invasion.

The US stations around 30,000 troops in security ally South Korea to protect it from its neighbour, which invaded in 1950 in an attempt to reunify the peninsula by force.

Both Seoul and US military commanders in the South indicated they had no idea the announceme­nt was coming, and in an editorial Wednesday the Korea Herald said it was ‘worrisome’.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Trump and Kim attend a meeting in Singapore in this picture released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency.
— Reuters photo Trump and Kim attend a meeting in Singapore in this picture released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Commuters read the latest edition of the Rodong Sinmun newspaper showing images of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meeting with US president Donald Trump during their summit in Singapore, at a news stand on a subway platform of the Pyongyang metro.
— AFP photo Commuters read the latest edition of the Rodong Sinmun newspaper showing images of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meeting with US president Donald Trump during their summit in Singapore, at a news stand on a subway platform of the Pyongyang metro.

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