Baltimore Sun

Pompeo to meet with top Kim aide

Session comes as U.S., N. Korea aim for summit

- By Eli Stokols and Tracy Wilkinson Eli Stokols is a special correspond­ent.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion moved on multiple fronts Tuesday to prepare for a possible nuclear summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore next month, as U.S. diplomats scrambled to revive the meeting that Trump had publicly scrapped last week.

Most importantl­y, the White House said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will travel to New York City on Wednesday to sit down with Gen. Kim Yong Chol, considered Kim Jong Un’s closest aide. The former intelligen­ce chief, who Pompeo met during his two visits to Pyongyang, presumably can speak directly about whether North Korea’s leader is serious about nuclear disarmamen­t.

Other U.S. teams huddled with North Korean officials in Singapore and planned to meet in the Demilitari­zed Zone between the two Koreas in a push to assemble the complex logistics and still-unformed agenda of a major arms control summit, which is tentativel­y back on the calendar for June 12.

Pompeo’s meeting in New York could produce a final decision in the White House as to whether Kim Jong Un will ultimately give up his nuclear arsenal and whether the still-stalled summit can proceed. Pompeo was known to harbor doubts about Kim’s intentions after his second visit to Pyongyang.

“I think howthat meeting goes (in NewYork), that will be the deciding factor on whether this summit moves forward,” said Suzanne DiMaggio, a fellow at New North Korean Gen. Kim Yong Chol, center, is to meet in New York on Wednesday with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. America, a non-partisan think tank, who helped facilitate the administra­tion’s first contacts with North Korea last year.

“He is an unsavory interlocut­or but he is also a highly credible one,” DiMaggio said of Gen. Kim. “Whatever he says, he is speaking for Kim Jong Un.”

South Korean news agency Yonhap reported that Gen. Kim would fly to New York on Wednesday after discussion­s with Chinese officials in Beijing. China is North Korea’s biggest trading partner and political ally.

Gen. Kim is vice chairman of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea and is in charge of relations with South Korea. One of numerous North Korean officials blackliste­d by the U.S. Treasury, he required State Department permission to travel to New York and is the most senior North Korean official to visit the United States in nearly two decades.

When Gen. Kim headed North Korea’s military intelligen­ce, he was accused of orchestrat­ing attacks on South Korean targets, including the March 2010 torpedoing of a South Korea warship that killed 46 seamen, as well as the November 2014 cyberattac­k of Sony Pictures and the release of hacked emails.

Following those incidents, the Obama administra­tion imposed personal sanctions on Gen. Kim in 2010 and 2015. His career clearly didn’t suffer since he accompanie­d Kim to summits with leaders of China and South Korea, and headed North Korea’s delegation to the closing ceremony of t he 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics in South Korea — where he sat close to Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter and adviser.

Trump praised the latest signs of diplomatic progress. “We have put a great team together for our talks with North Korea,” he tweeted.

“We’ve seen tremendous amounts of progress” toward the summit, said Heather Nauert, the State Department spokeswoma­n. “It is pretty remarkable where we are, given where we were a year ago.”

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House spokeswoma­n, also expressed optimism about a nuclear summit, saying “we expect it to take place.”

Joe Hagin, deputy White House chief of staff, led a “pre-advance” team in Singapore on Tuesday to coordinate logistics and security. Hagin also flew to Singapore two weeks ago, but the counterpar­t North Korean team didn’t show up for the planned meetings, according to the White House.

A separate U.S. delegation will meet later this week with North Korean envoys in the demilitari­zed zone that separates North Korea and South Korea.

Last Thursday, Trump wrote a public letter to Kim Jong Un pulling out of the June 12 summit, blaming what Trump called “tremendous anger and open hostility” from Pyongyang but leaving the door open to future talks — a letter the White House now credits with creating new momentum for a sit-down.

The “North Koreans have been engaging” since the May 24 letter, Sanders said in a statement Tuesday. “The United States continues to actively prepare for President Trump’s expected summit with leader Kim in Singapore

Meanwhile, an intelligen­ce assessment compiled by the CIA and described to NBC News by three U.S. officials concludes that the Kim regime is not prepared to let go of its nuclear arsenal, a finding at odds with some of Trump’s recent claims. “Everybody knows they are not going to denucleari­ze,” one of the officials said.

But North Korea is willing to offer a number of concession­s, including opening a hamburger franchise in Pyongyang, according to the CIA report. The bizarre offer indicates Kim is eager to convey a placating message to Trump, whose love of fast food is well documented.

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