Albuquerque Journal

Moon to take message from Kim to Trump

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SEOUL, South Korea — A beaming South Korean President Moon Jae-in, freshly returned home Thursday from a whirlwind three-day summit with Kim Jong Un, said the North Korean leader wants the U.S. secretary of state to visit Pyongyang soon for nuclear talks, and also hopes for a quick follow-up to his June summit with President Donald Trump.

Only hours after standing with Kim on the peak of a volcano that’s at the heart of Kim dynasty propaganda, Moon told reporters in Seoul that he will be carrying a private message from Kim to Trump about the nuclear standoff when he meets the U.S. president in New York next week on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly session.

Both Trump, who has repeatedly spoken of his good relationsh­ip with Kim, and the North Korean leader have expressed a desire to follow up on the June meeting in Singapore that was meant to settle an impasse that seemed to be edging toward war last year. But there are worries among observers about whether Kim is as committed to denucleari­zation as he claims.

Moon faces increasing pressure from Washington to find a path forward in efforts to get Kim to completely — and unilateral­ly — abandon his nuclear arsenal, which is thought to be closing in on the ability to accurately target any part of the continenta­l United States.

“There are things that the United States wants us to convey to North Korea, and on the other side there are also things that North Korea wants us to convey to the United States,” Moon said at a press center in Seoul where reporters had watched parts of his summit with Kim on huge video screens that occasional­ly showed live streams from Pyongyang. “I will faithfully serve that role when I meet President Trump to facilitate dialogue between North Korea and the United States.”

Moon, who set up the Singapore summit and is eager for another to happen, also told reporters that he’ll convey to Trump his and Kim’s desire to get a declaratio­n on ending the Korean War by the end of this year. The war still technicall­y continues because it ended in 1953 with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. An end-ofwar declaratio­n would be the first step toward an eventual formal peace treaty, but the United States is wary about signing off on something that could result in Kim pushing for the removal of U.S. troops stationed in South Korea to deter the North.

Both leaders also vowed to work together to try to host the Summer Olympics in 2032.

 ?? SOURCE: PYONGYANG PRESS CORPS ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in, second from right, and his wife, Kim Jung-sook, right, stand with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, second from left, and his wife Ri Sol Ju on Mount Paetku in North Korea.
SOURCE: PYONGYANG PRESS CORPS South Korean President Moon Jae-in, second from right, and his wife, Kim Jung-sook, right, stand with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, second from left, and his wife Ri Sol Ju on Mount Paetku in North Korea.

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