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US, North Korea to set agenda for Trump-Kim summit in Vietnam

- Jeff Sung Seoul

US and North Korean nuclear envoys are set to discuss the details of their stalled nuclear disarmamen­t talks ahead of a second summit between the two nations in Vietnam, expected to be held later this month.

After a three-day visit to Seoul, US Special Representa­tive Stephen Biegun flew to Pyongyang early Wednesday morning. The summit is currently penciled in for Feb. 27-28.

The visit is Biegun’s second since traveling to the North Korean capital with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo last October. During his stay in Seoul, Biegun had a series of meetings with top South Korean envoys, including Chung Eui-yong, a presidenti­al national security adviser, to discuss North Korea’s denucleari­zation.

Biegun is expected to hold talks with his counterpar­t, Kim Hyokchol, a former North Korean ambassador to Spain, during his stay in Pyongyang.

“It is a positive signal for the North to invite the US nuclear envoy to Pyongyang,” said Yim Sung-joon, a former national security adviser to former President Kim Dae-jung. “It is highly possible that he could meet with higher-ranking North Korean officials, hopefully Kim Jong-un, should talks go smoothly.”

Shin Beom-cheol, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, anticipate­d the Biegun-Kim talks would be focused on setting the agenda items for the second Trump-Kim Summit in Vietnam.

“The two diplomats are expected to discuss agenda items on the summit table,” Shin said. “I don’t think, however, they would be able to agree on complete denucleari­zation, but they would be able to narrow a gap over the shutdown of the North Korean Yongbyon nuclear facility.”

The North would instead demand “correspond­ing measures” including the lifting of US economic sanctions against the regime and some form of security guarantee. “The two sides are expected to be engaged in a tug-of-war over the verificati­on of the destructio­n of the Yongbyon nuclear reactor,” Shin added.

The North had alluded to the possibilit­y of scrapping the Yongbyon complex during an Intra-Korean Summit in Pyongyang last September.

The regime also suggested that it might allow inspection­s of the site if it received US concession­s.

Yongbyon is North Korea’s key nuclear facility, where plutonium and highly enriched uranium, the primary materials for its nuclear weapons, are produced.

Before flying to Seoul, Biegun said: “We are prepared to discuss many actions that could help build trust between our two countries.”

He also hinted the Trump administra­tion was prepared to take action simultaneo­usly and in parallel with North Korea.

“Chairman Kim also committed, in both the joint statement from the aforementi­oned Pyongyang Summit, as well as during (Pompeo’s) October meetings in Pyongyang, to the dismantlem­ent and destructio­n of North Korea’s plutonium and uranium enrichment facilities,” he added.

Concerns are growing in some corners that offering such an exchange would lighten the pressure on the North, allowing it to slow denucleari­zation.

 ??  ?? The last nuclear test by North Korea was conducted in September 2017.The regime also launched an interconti­nental ballistic missile in November 2017.Pyongyang is expected to demand ‘correspond­ing measures’ including the lifting of US sanctions. North Korean leader KimJong Un and US President Donald Trump shake hands prior to their meeting on Sentosa Island in Singapore. AP/File
The last nuclear test by North Korea was conducted in September 2017.The regime also launched an interconti­nental ballistic missile in November 2017.Pyongyang is expected to demand ‘correspond­ing measures’ including the lifting of US sanctions. North Korean leader KimJong Un and US President Donald Trump shake hands prior to their meeting on Sentosa Island in Singapore. AP/File

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