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Pompeo brushes off N. Korea ‘gangster’ tag, says sanctions to stay

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TOKYO — US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Sunday shrugged off North Korean accusation­s of “gangster-like” behavior and said sanctions on Pyongyang would only be lifted with “final” denucleari­zation.

Speaking in Tokyo after two days of intense discussion­s in Pyongyang, Mr. Pompeo insisted the talks were making progress and were being conducted in “good faith.”

In stark contrast, Pyongyang’s take was overwhelmi­ngly negative, with the North warning that the future of the peace process was being jeopardize­d by overbearin­g US demands for its unilateral nuclear disarmamen­t.

Speaking privately, US officials suggested the harshly worded North Korean reaction was a negotiatin­g tactic.

But after two days of theatrical amity in Pyongyang it illustrate­d the gulf that remains between the two sides.

In Tokyo, Mr. Pompeo briefed his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts on the talks, and sought to reassure them that the dialogue with North Korea would continue.

His trip to Pyongyang had been aimed at fleshing out denucleari­zation commitment­s made during last month’s historic summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

North Korea has long trumpeted a denucleari­zation goal, but one that it sees as a lengthy process of undefined multilater­al disarmamen­t on the entire Korean peninsula, rather than a unilateral dismantlem­ent of its nuclear arsenal.

Speaking in Tokyo, Mr. Pompeo said his efforts to push the North on disarmamen­t had the backing of the entire internatio­nal community.

“If those requests were gangster-like, the world is a gangster, because there was a unanimous decision at the UN Security Council about what needs to be achieved,” he said.

While insisting again that the talks were moving forwards, he stressed that nothing had happened to merit a relaxation of the tough sanctions imposed on the North over its nuclear missile program.

“Sanctions will remain in place until final, fully verified denucleari­zation as agreed to by Chairman Kim (Jong Un) occurs,” Mr. Pompeo said, adding that the US would seek to smooth the path by providing security guarantees requested by Pyongyang.

‘NO-ONE WALKED AWAY’

In practical terms, Pompeo mentioned only that officials from both sides would meet on July 12 to discuss the repatriati­on of the remains of some US soldiers killed during the 1950-1953 Korean War.

North Korea’s angry reaction to the talks with Mr. Pompeo came in a Foreign Ministry statement that berated the Secretary over his “unilateral and gangsterli­ke” demands and for offering no constructi­ve steps on the US side.

“It seems the US misunderst­ood our goodwill and patience,” the statement said.

Pyongyang noted that it had already destroyed a nuclear test site — a concession that Trump has publicly hailed as a victory for peace — and lamented that Mr. Pompeo had proved unwilling to match this with US concession­s.

It dismissed Mr. Trump’s unilateral order to suspend joint US and South Korean war games as a cosmetic and “highly reversible” measure and criticized US negotiator­s who “never mentioned” the subject of bringing the 1953 Korean War to a formal end with a peace treaty.

“We thought that the US side would come with a constructi­ve proposal… But this expectatio­n and hope of ours was so naive as to be gullible,” the statement said.

Professor Yang Moo-Jin at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said Pyongyang’s criticism was aimed at driving a wedge between Trump and his top officials.

“The North is trying to get an upper hand in further negotiatio­ns,” Mr. Yang said.

And Mr. Pompeo was adamant that those further negotiatio­ns would go ahead.

“We talked about what the North Koreans are continuing to do and how it’s the case that we can get our arms around achieving what Chairman Kim and President Trump both agreed to,” he said.

“No- one walked away from that.”

And he said some progress had been made towards agreeing “the modalities” of North Korea’s destructio­n of a missile facility.

Mr. Pompeo, who has now made three visits to Pyongyang, began the outreach when he was still Mr. Trump’s Central Intelligen­ce Agency director and remained the point man on negotiatio­ns after the process became public and he became secretary of state. —

 ??  ?? US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono and South Korea’s Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha attend a press conference at Iikura Guest House in Tokyo in this July 8 photo.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono and South Korea’s Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha attend a press conference at Iikura Guest House in Tokyo in this July 8 photo.

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