The Press

Pyongyang ready for talks over NK nukes

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NORTH KOREA/US: North Korea’s government has communicat­ed with the United States to say that leader Kim Jong Un is ready to discuss his nuclear weapons programme with President Donald Trump, officials said yesterday, increasing the likelihood that the unpreceden­ted summit will actually occur.

The confirmati­on from Pyongyang directly, rather than from third countries like South Korea, has created more confidence within Trump’s administra­tion about the wisdom of holding such a meeting, as US officials make secretive preparatio­ns. The Trump administra­tion has long said that if the North Koreans weren’t ready to discuss giving up their nuclear programme, there was no reason for the two countries to hold negotiatio­ns.

Trump took his own administra­tion and other countries by surprise last month when he accepted an unusual offer from Kim to hold a meeting. The North had conveyed the invitation to a visiting delegation from South Korea, which in turn travelled to Washington and relayed the message to Trump.

The president said yes to the meeting on the spot, even though the US had not yet heard directly from North Korea about Kim’s intentions.

The US later heard from other countries including China, where Kim paid a rare visit, that the North was serious about the offer.

Still, North Korea’s government has not said anything publicly at all about a meeting with Trump, and the lack of known contact between Pyongyang and Washington about the meeting has fuelled further speculatio­n about the seriousnes­s of Kim’s offer.

A Trump administra­tion official yesterday said that the US had ‘‘confirmed that Kim Jong Un is willing to discuss the denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula?.’’ A second official said that confirmati­on had come through direct contact between American and North Korean officials.

Neither of the officials would say when or how the contact took place, nor in what location. The officials weren’t authorised to comment by name and demanded anonymity.

Previously, former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had said there were at least two or three channels through which US and North Korean officials communicat­e from time to time.

The Trump administra­tion has not said where the meeting will place or whether a location has been determined, nor has an exact date been set.

Initially, the White House said it expected the meeting to take place by the end of May.

It’s unclear whether a date that early could be achieved or whether it might be delayed. -AP

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