Austin American-Statesman

White House ready to talk to N. Korea again

Dictator requested follow-up meeting in a letter to president.

- By David Nakamura and Felicia Sonmez

‘... nothing like good dialogue from two people that like each other!’

President Donald Trump

The White House said Monday that talks are underway with North Korea over setting up a second summit meeting between President Trump and leader Kim Jong Un, as the two sides seek to put stalled nuclear negotiatio­ns back on track.

Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that Kim requested the follow-up to the historic Singapore summit in June in a “warm, very positive letter” to Trump delivered in recent days.

“It’s something that we want to take place and are already working on making that happen,” Sanders said, though she emphasized that no decisions have been made regarding timing or a venue.

The announceme­nt was the latest sign that Trump, despite growing frustratio­n, remains heavily invested in the efforts to get Pyongyang to comply with pledges to denucleari­ze made during the Singapore meeting. Trump abruptly canceled a planned visit from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Pyongyang three weeks ago, citing a lack of progress.

But the president has reacted positively to Kim’s recent overture, boasting at a rally in Montana late last week that Kim had “said some terrific things about me.”

“He said very strongly that we want to denucleari­ze North Korea during President Trump’s tenure,” Trump told supporters at the event in Billings, citing reports from South Korean emissaries who had visited Pyongyang and met with Kim last week. “That’s a nice.”

Sanders said the White House would not release a In tweet about North Korea

copy of Kim’s letter without Pyongyang’s permission. She cited North Korea’s decision not to include ballistic missiles in a military parade in Pyongyang over the weekend as a sign the Kim regime was taking steps not to antagonize the United States.

“The recent parade in North Korea, for once, was not about their nuclear arsenal,” Sanders said. “The president has achieved tremendous success with his policies so far. And this letter was further evidence of progress in that relationsh­ip.”

Some analysts had pointed to the U.N. General Assembly meetings in New York in two weeks as a possible venue for a Trump-Kim meeting, but the North Korean leader has offered no indication he plans to attend. U.S. officials have privately suggested it is unlikely such a meeting would take place there during Trump’s twoday visit.

In a tweet Sunday, Trump described Kim’s decision not to display ballistic missiles as a “big and positive statement” adding that there is “nothing like good dialogue from two people that like each other!”

But other White House aides struck more cautious notes on Monday. Speaking to reporters, national security adviser John Bolton said the administra­tion is “still waiting for them” to take significan­t action. Among other things, the United States is seeking a detailed declaratio­n from the North over the size of its nuclear and ballistic missile arsenals.

“The possibilit­y of another meeting between the two presidents obviously exists,” Bolton said, “but President Trump can’t make North Korea walk through the door he’s holding open. They’re the ones that have to take the steps to denucleari­ze, and that’s what we’re waiting for.”

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 ?? MINISTRY OF COMMUNICAT­IONS SINGAPORE ?? In a “warm, very positive letter” to President Donald Trump (right), North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) requested a follow-up meeting to the historic Singapore summit held in June.
MINISTRY OF COMMUNICAT­IONS SINGAPORE In a “warm, very positive letter” to President Donald Trump (right), North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) requested a follow-up meeting to the historic Singapore summit held in June.

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