Baltimore Sun

U.S. rejects criticism of N. Korea summit

White House points to Kim’s promises in the offer to meet

- By Matthew Pennington and Foster Klug

WASHINGTON — The White House tried to swat away criticism Friday that the U.S. is getting nothing in exchange for agreeing to a historic face-to-face summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said North Korea has made promises to denucleari­ze, stop its nuclear and missile testing and allow joint U.S.- South Korean military exercises. But questions remained over what North Korea means by “denucleari­ze” and what the U.S. might be risking with a summit that will build up Kim’s stature among world leaders.

“Let’s not forget that the North Koreans did promise something,” Sanders said, responding to a reporter’s question about why Trump agreed to a meeting — unpreceden­ted between leaders of the two nations — without preconditi­ons.

“We are not going to have this meeting take place until we see concrete actions that match the words and the rhetoric of North Korea,” she said

Still, the White House indicated that planning for the meeting was on track.

The previous night’s announceme­nt of the summit marked a dramatic turnaround after a year of escalating tensions and rude insults between the two leaders in nerve-rattling Twitter exchanges about nuclear war.

North Korea’s capabiliti­es are close to posing a direct atomic threat to the U.S. And the wider world has grown fearful of a resumption of the Korean War that ended in 1953 without a peace treaty.

The prospect of the first U.S.-North Korea summit has allayed those fears somewhat. The European Union, Russia and China — whose leader spoke by phone with Trump on Friday — have all welcomed the move.

North Korea’s govern- ment has yet to formally comment on its invitation to Trump. South Korea said the president agreed to meet Kim by May, but Sanders said Friday that no time and place had been set.

Still, some lawmakers and foreign policy experts voiced skepticism about the wisdom of agreeing to a summit without preparatio­ns by lower-level officials, particular­ly given the lack of trust between the two sides. North Korea is also holding three American citizens for what Washington views as political reasons.

“A presidenti­al visit is really the highest coin in the realm in diplomacy circles,” said Bruce Klingner, a Korea expert at the conservati­ve-leaning Heritage Foundation, adding that Trump “seemed to spend it without getting anything in return, not even the release of the three U.S. captives.”

Some say Trump could be setting himself up for failure amid doubts over whether Kim has any intention to relinquish an atomic arsenal that he has made central to his personal stature and the North’s standing in the world. Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders says the U.S. got promises from Kim Jong Un.

Evans Revere, a former senior State Department official experience­d in negotiatin­g with North Korea, warned there is a disconnect between how the North and the U.S. describes “denucleari­zation” of the divided Korean Peninsula. For the U.S., it refers to North Korea giving up its nukes; for North Korea it also means removing the threat of American forces in South Korea and the nuclear deterrent with which the U.S. protects its allies in the region.

“The fundamenta­l definition of denucleari­zation is quite different between Washington and Pyongyang,” Revere said, noting that as recently as Jan. 1, Kim had vigorously reaf- firmed the importance of nukes for North Korea’s security. He said that misunderst­andings at a summit could lead to “recriminat­ion and anger” and even military action if Trump were embarrasse­d by failure.

“There is good reason to talk, but only if we are talking about something that is worth doing and that could be reasonably verified,” said former Defense Secretary William Perry, who dealt with North Korea during President Bill Clinton’s administra­tion. “Otherwise we are setting ourselves up for a major diplomatic failure.”

The White House maintains that Kim has been compelled to reach out for presidenti­al-level talks be- cause of Trump’s policy of “maximum pressure.”

However, other presidents have lodged economic sanctions against North Korea, as Trump has. And the North has made a habit of reaching out after raising fears during previous crises, with offers of dialogue meant to win aid and concession­s. It has also, from the U.S. point of view, repeatedly cheated on past nuclear deals.

Without question, the North wants a peace treaty to end the technicall­y stillactiv­e Korean War and drive all U.S. troops from the Korean Peninsula, removing what it says is a hostile encircleme­nt of its territory by Washington and Seoul.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY ??
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY

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