Gulf News

South Korea makes push for successful Trump-Kim talks

TRUMP SAYS US HASN’T BEEN NOTIFIED ABOUT NORTH KOREAN THREAT TO CANCEL SUMMIT

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South Korea said yesterday it’s pushing to reset high-level talks with North Korea and will communicat­e closely with Washington and Pyongyang to increase the chances of a successful summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on resolving the standoff over the North’s nuclear weapons.

The announceme­nt by Seoul’s presidenti­al National Security Council came a day after North Korea threatened to scrap next month’s historic meeting between Trump and Kim, saying it has no interest in a “one-sided” affair meant to pressure the North to abandon its nukes.

The North also broke off a high-level meeting with South Korea to protest the US-South Korean military exercises the North has long claimed are an invasion rehearsal.

Vague vow

The North’s surprise announceme­nt seemed to cool what had been an unusual flurry of outreach from a country that last year conducted a provocativ­e series of weapons tests that had many fearing the region was on the edge of war. Analysts said it’s unlikely that North Korea intends to scuttle all diplomacy. More likely, they said, is that it wants to gain leverage ahead of the talks between Kim and Trump, scheduled for June 12 in Singapore.

South Korea, which brokered the talks between Kim and Trump, will “closely mediate using multiple communicat­ion channels with the United States and with North Korea so that the North Korea-US summit can proceed successful­ly,” said the NSC after a meeting chaired by Chung Eui-yong, the top security adviser of South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

The NSC also urged the North to faithfully abide by the agreements reached between Moon and Kim in their summit last month, where they issued a vague vow on the “complete denucleari­sation” of their peninsula and pledged permanent peace.

Senior officials from the two Koreas were to sit down at a border village on Wednesday to discuss how to implement their leaders’ agreements to reduce military tensions along their heavily fortified border and improve overall ties before the North cancelled the meeting.

In Washington, Trump said the US hasn’t been notified about the North Korean threat to cancel the summit.

“We haven’t seen anything. We haven’t heard anything. We will see what happens,” he said.

‘Still hopeful’

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the administra­tion is “still hopeful” that the summit will take place, and that threats from North Korea to scrap the meeting were “something that we fully expected.”

She said Trump is “ready for very tough negotiatio­ns,” adding that “if they want to meet, we’ll be ready and if they don’t that’s OK.” She said if there is no meeting, the US would “continue with the campaign of maximum pressure” against the North.

North Korean first vice foreign minister Kim Kye Gwan said in a statement carried by state media “we are no longer interested in a negotiatio­n that will be all about driving us into a corner and making a onesided demand for us to give up our nukes and this would force us to reconsider whether we would accept the North Korea-US summit meeting.”

Bringing up Libya

He criticised recent comments by Trump’s top security adviser, John Bolton, and other US officials who have said the North should follow the “Libyan model” of nuclear disarmamen­t and provide a “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le dismantlem­ent.”

He also took issue with US views that the North should fully relinquish its biological and chemical weapons.

Some analysts say bringing up Libya, which dismantled its rudimentar­y nuclear programme in the 2000s in exchange for sanctions relief, jeopardise­s progress in negotiatio­ns with the North.

Kim Jong-un took power weeks after former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s gruesome death at the hands of rebel forces amid a popular uprising in October 2011. The North has frequently used Gaddafi’s death to justify its own nuclear developmen­t in the face of perceived US threats.

Annual military drills between Washington and Seoul have long been a major source of contention between the Koreas, and analysts have wondered whether their continuati­on would hurt the détente that, since an outreach by Kim in January, has replaced the insults and threats of war.

 ?? AP ?? A TV screen shows file footage of US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Seoul. North Korea has threatened to scrap June’s summit with President Trump.
AP A TV screen shows file footage of US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Seoul. North Korea has threatened to scrap June’s summit with President Trump.

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