The Borneo Post

Pompeo says he will meet N.Korea number two in New York

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WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Sunday he will meet this week in New York with North Korea’s number two to discuss denucleari­zation and a possible second summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

“I expect we’ll make some real progress, including an effort to make sure that the summit between our two leaders can take place where we can make substantia­l steps toward denucleari­zation,” Pompeo said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Pompeo’s meeting with Kim Yong Chol later this week comes with the two sides at loggerhead­s nearly five months after a historic summit in June in which Trump and Kim pledged to work toward the denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula.

North Korea’s foreign ministry warned earlier in the week that Pyongyang will “seriously” consider reviving its nuclear weapons program unless US sanctions are lifted.

Pompeodism­issedthest­atement, telling “Fox News Sunday,” “I’m not worried about that.”

“We are very focused. We know with whom we are negotiatin­g, we know what their positions (are) and President Trump has made his position very clear,” Pompeo said.

He added that there would be “no economic relief until we have achieved our ultimate objective.”

News of the meeting, and the possibilit­y of another summit, also comes just two days before crucial US midterm elections seen as a referendum on Trump.

Trump has often pointed to the detente with North Korea -- the subject of saber-rattling rhetoric and soaring tensions early in his term -- as a signature foreign policy accomplish­ment.

Pompeo emphasized in both television appearance­s that there have been no missile or nuclear tests since the summit in Singapore, and remains of US troops killed during the Korean War have been returned.

“We’ve had success in just a handful of months since this past June, and we continue to make good progress. I’m confident that we’ll advance the ball again this week when I’m in New York City,” he said on CBS.

But the progress has fallen well short of the promise of the summit, with Washington pushing to maintain sanctions against the North until its “final, fully verified denucleari­zation,” and Pyongyang condemning US demands as “gangster-like.”

“The improvemen­t of relations and sanctions are incompatib­le,” said the foreign ministry statement, released under the name of the director of the foreign ministry’s Institute for American Studies.

“What remains to be done is the US correspond­ing reply,” it added.

Kim Yong Chol, Pompeo’s counterpar­t in the talks, is a general, a former top intelligen­ce chief and right-hand man to the North Korean leader. — AFP

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