The Star Malaysia

Talks to salvage summit

The United States and North Korea open talks in New York to set stage for Singapore meeting.

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NEW YORK:

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and a top North Korean official are set to continue talks in New York to try to salvage next month’s nuclear summit, as Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov flew into Pyongyang for discussion­s with Kim Jong-un.

Kim Yong-chol, considered the North Korean leader’s right-hand man, is the most senior official from Pyongyang to visit the United States in 18 years.

Pyongyang’s envoy joined Pompeo at the apartment of a US diplomat on Manhattan’s East side for talks over an evening meal that lasted about an hour and a half.

Two more meetings were scheduled yesterday.

“Good working dinner with Kim Yong-chol in New York tonight,” Pompeo tweeted. “Steak, corn, and cheese on the menu.”

It was the third meeting between the two officials who are working to finalise planning for a June 12 summit designed to end a nuclear standoff that has threatened to plunge Korea back into war.

“They are meeting to see what needs to be done in the two weeks that remain,” a senior US official said.

“Between now and if we’re going to have a summit, they’re going to have to make clear what they’re willing to do.”

US and North Korean envoys have also been meeting in Panmunjom in the Demilitari­sed Zone between North and South Korea, and an American team is in Singapore to make logistical arrangemen­ts for the meeting.

Washington wants North Korea to quickly give up all its nuclear weapons in a verifiable way in return for sanctions and economic relief.

But analysts say North Korea will be unwilling to cede its nuclear deterrent unless it is given security guarantees that the US will not try to topple the regime.

Meanwhile, Russia’s foreign minister arrived in Pyongyang for talks with Jong-un, saying before the meeting that Moscow “welcomes” the recent flurry of diplomacy on the peninsula.

“We also cheer the summits that have already taken place between Pyongyang and Seoul, and the next planned summit between the leaders of North Korea and US,” said Lavrov, on his first visit to the North since 2009.

Photos and video released by Russian state media showed Jongun and Lavrov shaking hands.

Lavrov passed on greetings from President Vladimir Putin to the North Korean leader and invited him to visit Russia, according to a statement from the Russian foreign ministry.

Russia is the latest major nation to reach out to North Korea since Trump accepted Jong-un’s proposal for a summit to defuse tensions.

Jong-un has already had two meetings each with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, South Korean President Moon Jae-in, and Pompeo – once as CIA director and then as secretary of state.

Lavrov spoke with Pompeo by telephone for the first time Wednesday, ahead of his Pyongyang trip.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump suddenly announced a cancellati­on of the summit, before reversing course 24 hours later.

Pompeo has scheduled a news conference yesterday, at the end of his meetings with Jong-un.

The recently-appointed secretary of state called his South Korean and Singaporea­n counterpar­ts over the weekend, and Japan is also keenly watching summit preparatio­ns.

Yong Chol, who is making his first US visit, is the most senior North Korean on US soil since Vice Marshal Jo Myong-rok met thenpresid­ent Bill Clinton in 2000.

The general has played a key role during recent rounds of diplomacy aimed at ending the nuclear stalemate on the Korean peninsula.

He sat near to Trump’s daughter Ivanka during February’s closing ceremony for the Winter Olympics in South Korea, an event that was seen as a turning point in the nuclear crisis.

He also accompanie­d Jong-un on both of his recent trips to China to meet Xi, and held talks with Pompeo in Pyongyang.

The key task ahead of the June 12 summit is to settle the agenda. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Meeting of minds: Lavrov (left) speaking with Jong-un in Pyongyang. — AFP
Meeting of minds: Lavrov (left) speaking with Jong-un in Pyongyang. — AFP

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