Albuquerque Journal

Trump, N. Korea rekindle hope of summit

Meeting could still take place on June 12

- BY CATHERINE LUCEY, ZEKE MILLER AND MATTHEW PENNINGTON ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — “Everybody plays games,” President Donald Trump declared Friday as he suggested the potentiall­y historic North Korean summit he had suddenly called off might be getting back on track.

His sights set on a meeting that has raised hopes for a halt in North Korea’s nuclear weapons developmen­t, Trump welcomed the North’s conciliato­ry response to his Thursday letter withdrawin­g from the Singapore summit with Kim Jong Un. Rekindling hopes as quickly as he had doused them, Trump said it was even possible the meeting could take place on the originally planned June 12 date.

“They very much want to do it; we’d like to do it,” he said.

The sweetening tone was just the latest change in a roller-coaster game of brinkmansh­ip — talks about talks with two unpredicta­ble world leaders trading threats and blandishme­nts. On Thursday, White House officials had noted that Trump had left the door open with a letter to Kim that blamed “tremendous anger and open hostility” by Pyongyang but also urged Kim to call him.

By Friday, North Korea issued a statement saying it was still “willing to give the U.S. time and opportunit­ies” to reconsider talks “at any time, at any format.” Trump rapidly tweeted that the statement was “very good news” and told reporters that “we’re talking to them now.”

Confident in his negotiatin­g skills, Trump views the meeting as a legacy-defining opportunit­y and has relished the press attention and the speculatio­n about a possible Nobel Peace Prize. He made a quick decision to accept the sit-down in March, over the concerns of many top aides, and has remained committed, even amid rising concerns about the challenges he faces in scoring a positive agreement.

Asked on Friday if the North Koreans were playing games with their communicat­ions, Trump responded, “Everybody plays games. You know that better than anybody.”

While the president did not detail the nature of the new U.S. communicat­ion with the North on Friday, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said at the Pentagon: “The diplomats are still at work on the summit, possibilit­y of a summit, so that is very good news.” He characteri­zed the recent backand-forth as the “usual give and take.”

Asked if White House aides will still travel to Singapore this weekend to work on logistics for the trip, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, “We’ll see” and “We’ll be ready, one way or the other.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke Friday with a top official from South Korea, whose leaders had appeared to be taken aback when Trump withdrew from the summit. Spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said Pompeo and South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha reaffirmed their “shared commitment to the denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula” and pledged to coordinate “in all of their efforts to create conditions for dialogue with North Korea.”

The U.S. and North Korea do not have formal diplomatic relations, complicati­ng the task of communicat­ing between the two government­s. Under the Trump administra­tion, the CIA, where Pompeo served as director before becoming secretary of state, has taken an unusually prominent role in back-channel negotiatio­ns.

Pompeo last year assembled a working group at the CIA called the Korea Mission Center, which gradually assumed the lead role in talks with the North Koreans, and the group’s director, a retired senior CIA official with deep experience in the region, became the main U.S. interlocut­or with Pyongyang.

The group did not supplant the State Department’s traditiona­l mode of communicat­ion with the North, which is known as the “New York Channel” and involves U.S. diplomats and their North Korean counterpar­ts posted to the United Nations. But it did play the major role in organizing Pompeo’s two trips to Pyongyang, once as CIA director and once as secretary of state.

Trump’s comments Friday came after days of mixed messages on the summit.

Trump, in his letter to Kim on Thursday, objected specifical­ly to a statement from a top North Korean Foreign Ministry official. That statement referred to Vice President Mike Pence as a “political dummy” for his comments on the North and said it was up to the Americans whether they would “meet us at a meeting room or encounter us at nuclearto-nuclear showdown.”

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters attend a rally to denounce U.S. policies against North Korea near the U.S. embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Friday. North Korea said Friday that it is still willing to sit down for talks.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters attend a rally to denounce U.S. policies against North Korea near the U.S. embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Friday. North Korea said Friday that it is still willing to sit down for talks.

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