The Star Malaysia

Kim Jong-un is in Hanoi and will have a private dinner and meeting with Donald Trump today.

US president and Kim to tackle N. Korean nuke issue and ending Korean war

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HANOI: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump both arrived in Vietnam, the eve of their second summit at which they will tackle how to implement a North Korean pledge to give up its nuclear weapons.

Trump flew into the capital Hanoi on Air Force One, touching down just before 9pm yesterday.

Kim arrived by train early in the day after a three-day, 3,000km journey from his capital, Pyongyang, through China. He completed the last stretch from a border station to Hanoi by car.

The two leaders, who seemed to strike up a surprising­ly warm relationsh­ip at their first summit in Singapore last June, will meet for a brief one-on-one conversati­on this evening, followed by a dinner, at which they will each be accompanie­d by two guests and interprete­rs, White House spokesman Sarah Sanders told reporters.

They will meet again tomorrow, she said.

Their talks come eight months after the historic summit in Singapore, the first between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader.

While the first meeting was all

about breaking the ice after decades of war and bitter animosity between their countries, this time there will be pressure on both to move beyond the vaguely worded commitment they made in Singapore to work towards the complete denucleari­sation of the

Korean peninsula.

Trump’s critics at home have warned him against cutting a deal that would do little to curb North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, urging specific, verifiable North Korean action to abandon the nuclear weapons that threaten the United States.

In return, Kim would expect significan­t US concession­s such as relief from punishing sanctions and a declaratio­n that the 1950-53 Korean War is at last formally over.

Vietnamese officials were on hand to greet Kim at the station in Dong Dang town after he crossed the border from China. He got a red-carpet welcome with honour guard, military band and fluttering North Korean and Vietnamese flags.

Kim’s sister, Kim Yo-jong, who has emerged as an important aide, arrived with him.

About a dozen bodyguards briefly ran alongside Kim’s car as he set off for the two-hour journey to Hanoi, smiling and waving to children lining the route.

Roads were closed with Vietnamese security forces in armouredpe­rsonnel carriers guarding the route to the city’s Melia hotel where he is staying.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also arrived yesterday and met Vietnamese Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh for talks.

Trump told reporters before he left he and Kim would have ”a very tremendous summit”.

Tweeting on Monday, he stressed the benefits to North Korea if it gave up its nuclear weapons.

“With complete denucleari­sation, North Korea will rapidly become an Economic Powerhouse. Without it, just more of the same. Chairman Kim will make a wise decision!” Trump said.

In a speech late on Sunday, Trump, however, appeared to play down the possibilit­y of a major breakthrou­gh, saying he would be happy as long as North Korea maintained its pause on weapons testing.

“I’m not in a rush,” he said. “I just don’t want testing. As long as there’s no testing, we’re happy.” North Korea conducted its last nuclear test in September 2017 and its last interconti­nental ballistic missile test in November 2017.

Analysts say the two leaders have to move beyond summit symbolism.

“The most basic yet urgent task is to come to a shared understand­ing of what denucleari­sation would entail,” said Gi-Wook Shin, director of Stanford’s Asia-Pacific Research Center.

“The ambiguity and obscurity of the term ‘denucleari­sation’ only exacerbate­s the scepticism about both the US and North Korean commitment­s to denucleari­sation.

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 ??  ?? Duty calls: Trump waving good-bye while boarding Air Force One for his trip to Vietnam in Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland. — AP
Duty calls: Trump waving good-bye while boarding Air Force One for his trip to Vietnam in Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland. — AP

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