The Timaru Herald

White House sceptical of NK plans

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UNITED STATES: The Trump White House is reacting scepticall­y in private to North Korea’s announceme­nt of plans to freeze nuclear weapons testing, warning that dictator Kim Jong Un could be setting a trap and vowing not to back off a hard-line stance ahead of a potential leaders’ summit.

President Donald Trump called Pyongyang’s move ‘‘progress’’ and ‘‘good news’’ in a pair of tweets after the news broke on Saturday. Behind the scenes, however, his aides cautioned yesterday that Kim’s statement that the North would halt testing and shutter one nuclear facility was more notable for what he left out: a direct pledge to work toward nuclear disarma- ment. Although some foreign policy analysts were heartened that Kim appeared eager to set a positive tone for his summit with Trump, which could come in late May or early June, Trump aides were less enthused. In their view, Kim’s moves aimed to offer relatively modest pledges – which could quickly be reversed – to create the ‘‘illusion’’ that he is ‘‘reasonable’’ and willing to compromise.

That, the Trump aides said, would make it more politicall­y difficult for the United States to reject the North’s demands.

Kim’s announceme­nt in Pyongyang surprised White House officials who had been anticipati­ng him making some sort of state- ment to the North Korean people in advance of a summit with Trump but did not know when or how he would deliver it. North Korea’s state news agency read Kim’s statement on television and issued a written version in English. The young dictator pledged to turn his regime’s attention away from weapons developmen­t and toward boosting the economy on an ‘‘upward spiral.’’

White House aides viewed the statement as a signal that Kim’s goal is to get the United States and its allies to ease the punishing economic sanctions that the Trump administra­tion helped enact since the president took office. But they vowed that the administra­tion has learned from past mistakes in which North Korea violated agreements over its nuclear program after sanctions were lifted. The aides spoke on the condition of anonymity to freely discuss private talks.

Kim is set to meet with South Korean President Moon Jae-in this week in what is being viewed as a preliminar­y summit ahead of the face-to-face with Trump. A date and location have not been announced for the latter summit.

South Korean officials said that Kim has signalled he is willing to discuss ways to formally end the Korean War, whose hostilitie­s have been suspended since a 1953 armistice, and that he has dropped the North’s long-standing demands that the United States withdraw tens of thousands of stationed on the peninsula.

A key test for Trump will be to navigate the competing pressures of the US allies in the region. Moon’s liberal administra­tion is attempting to broker a deal to reduce tensions over fears of war, while conservati­ve Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who views Kim’s recent moves more suspicious­ly, is pressing Trump to ensure that Japan’s interests are protected in any final agreement.

Abe used his two-day visit to the president at Mar-a-Lago to emphasise that Japan will insist on ‘‘complete, verifiable and irreversib­le’’ steps toward denucleari­sation.

- Washington Post troops

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Visitors watch the North Korea side from the unificatio­n observator­y in Paju, South Korea, near the border with North Korea.
PHOTO: AP Visitors watch the North Korea side from the unificatio­n observator­y in Paju, South Korea, near the border with North Korea.

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