The Freeman

NoKor slams 'gangster-like' US in nuke talks

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TOKYO — The peace process between the United States and North Korea was in crisis Sunday after Pyongyang angrily rejected Washington's "gangster-like" demand for rapid nuclear disarmamen­t, after two days of intense talks.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was in Tokyo to brief his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts on the talks, which he called positive, and declined to comment on Pyongyang's statement rejecting his efforts and appealing to US President Donald Trump to revive the peace process.

In a tweet, Pompeo said he had held a "constructi­ve meeting" with his Japanese counterpar­t and discussed "maintainin­g maximum pressure" on North Korea.

He later met Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who stressed that a resolution of the North Korean nuclear issue was critical to global as well as regional stability.

Speaking privately, US officials suggested the harshly-worded North Korean statement was a negotiatin­g tactic. But after two days of theatrical amity in Pyongyang it illustrate­d the gulf that remains between the two sides.

The North's foreign ministry took exception to Pompeo's effort to secure concrete commitment­s to back leader Kim Jong Un's promise, made at a summit last month with US President Donald Trump, to work towards the "denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula."

In a statement relayed by the KCNA state news agency, a ministry spokesman said Pompeo had pushed "unilateral and gangster-like" demands on the nuclear issue, while offering no constructi­ve steps from the US side.

"It seems the US misunderst­ood our goodwill and patience," he added.

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 Pompeo had proved unwilling to match this with US concession­s.

It dismissed 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.

The tone was in stark comparison to Pompeo's characteri­zation of the talks in Pyongyang as a success, though critically he failed to present any new details as to how North Korea would honor its summit commitment to "denucleari­ze" in exchange for US security guarantees.

"These are complicate­d issues, but we made progress on almost all of the central issues, some places a great deal of progress, other places there's still more work to be done," Pompeo said.

The key sticking point remains the two sides' very different understand­ings of the commitment Kim made to nuclear disarmamen­t at his summit with Trump.

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