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Trump hails North Korea’s ‘awesome’ potential

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HANOI — US President Donald Trump hailed North Korea’s “awesome” potential on Wednesday and said its leader, Kim Jong Un, wanted to do something great, hours before they were due to meet to try to break a stalemate over the North’s nuclear weapons.

Despite little progress on his goal of ridding North Korea of its weapons programs, Mr. Trump appeared to be betting on his personal relationsh­ip with North Korea’s young leader, and the economic incentive after 70 years of hostility between their countries.

“Vietnam is thriving like few places on earth. North Korea would be the same, and very quickly, if it would denucleari­ze,” Mr. Trump said on Twitter, the morning after he arrived in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi for a second summit with Mr. Kim.

“The potential is AWESOME, a great opportunit­y, like almost none other in history, for my friend Mr. Kim Jong Un. We will know fairly soon — Very Interestin­g!”

He later said he was looking forward to the talks with Mr. Kim and hoped for success.

“He wants to do something great,” Mr. Trump said.

Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim will meet at the Metropole hotel at 6:30 p.m. (1130 GMT) for a 20-minute, one-on-one chat followed by a dinner with aides, the White House said.

The elegant interior of the 118-yearold Metropole thronged with security and diplomatic personnel from both sides — some snapping pictures — as hotel staff set up tables in a hotel lounge bar.

On Thursday, the two leaders will hold “a series of back and forth” meetings, the White House said. The venue for those talks has not been announced.

Mr. Trump said late last year he and Mr. Kim “fell in love,” and on the eve of his departure for the second summit said they had developed “a very, very good relationsh­ip.”

Whether the bonhomie can move them beyond summit pageantry to substantiv­e progress on eliminatin­g Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal that threatens the United States is the question that will dominate the talks in Hanoi.

Mr. Trump met Vietnamese President Nguyen Phu Trong at the grand, colonial-era presidenti­al palace in the morning to oversee the formal signing of deals by Vietnamese carriers VietJet and Bamboo Airways with Boeing Co. to buy 110 planes worth more than $15 billion.

He later met Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc for lunch.

PRESSURE

At their historic first summit in Singapore last June, Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim pledged to work toward denucleari­zation and permanent peace on the Korean peninsula.

North and South Korea have been technicall­y still at war since their 195053 conflict, with the Americans backing the South, ended in a truce, not a treaty.

That first meeting between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader ended with great fanfare but little substance over how to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

This time, both sides are likely to feel pressure to agree on specific measures — what concrete steps North Korea will take to give up the weapons, and what the United States will offer in return.

While the United States is demanding North Korea give up all of its nuclear and missile programs, the North wants to see the removal of a US nuclear umbrella for South Korea.

US intelligen­ce officials have said there is no sign North Korea will ever give up its entire arsenal of cherished nuclear weapons, which it sees as its guarantee of national security.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A WORKER installs the national flags of North Korea, Vietnam, and US for the North Korea-US summit in front of the Metropole hotel in Hanoi, Feb. 25.
REUTERS A WORKER installs the national flags of North Korea, Vietnam, and US for the North Korea-US summit in front of the Metropole hotel in Hanoi, Feb. 25.

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