Baltimore Sun

Korea summit is on again

President Trump plays down prospects for a quick agreement

- By Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared Friday that his on-and-off summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore is on again, even as he tried to move away from his previous suggestion­s that a quick deal could be hatched during the unpreceden­ted meeting less than two weeks from now.

“We’ll see where it leads, but we’re going to meet June 12,” Trump said after meeting for more than an hour with one of Kim’s top deputies in the Oval Office. “I think it’ll be a process,” Trump continued. “I never said it goes in one meeting. I said it’d be a process.”

But Trump, in previous comments, had suggested that a single summit meeting could lead to a dramatic breakthrou­gh — a “great celebratio­n” of an agreement to end North Korea’s nuclear arsenal. Most outside analysts and government experts believed those comments set unrealisti­c goals.

In addition to lowering expectatio­ns for the meeting, Trump de-emphasized the U.S. connection to Asia in a way that reversed language used by his predecesso­rs for decades and was sure to rattle U.S. allies. “We’re 6,000 miles away,” Trump said. “That’s their neighborho­od; it’s not our neighborho­od,” he said, emphasizin­g that Japan and South Korea, not the United States, would have to bear the major cost of any reconstruc­tion of North Korea’s economy.

Last week, Trump had announced that he was canceling the summit because of “hostile” North Korean statements. Friday’s Donald Trump

tableau, unimaginab­le a few months ago, set a different tone.

The North Korean official, Gen. Kim Yong Chol, a former spy chief who is one of his country’s most powerful figures, was greeted by chief of staff John Kelly at the White House. He was the highest-ranking North Korean to visit the White House in nearly two decades.

The general, accompanie­d by an interprete­r, met with Trump, Kelly and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the Oval Office, where he presented a letter from Kim Jong Un to Trump.

The delegation from a country dubbed by Trump’s last Republican predecesso­r as a member of the “axis of evil” shook hands, smiled and posed for photos after talks that Trump branded a “getting-to-know you meeting — plus.”

Trump teased at the contents of Kim’s letter, calling it “very nice” and hinting that he might release it publicly, only to insist minutes later that he had yet to read it.

“This was a letter presentati­on,” he said after the North Koreans loaded into their cars. “It ended up being a two-hour conversati­on. … I really think they want to do something, and if it’s possible, so do we.”

Trump made a point of saying that he and Kim Yong Chol discussed sanctions relief as well as denucleari­zation. The U.S. would hold off on “hundreds” of new sanctions against North Korea that had been planned, Trump said, although existing sanctions would remain in force.

He also said he had not raised North Korea’s record of brutal human rights violations — a subject that administra­tion officials highlighte­d repeatedly until weeks ago

Trump seemed eager to build bridges with North Korea, talking of ending sanctions against the isolated adversary. “I don’t even want to use the term ‘maximum pressure’ anymore,” he said, referring to the phrase the administra­tion has used for months to describe its policy toward Pyongyang. “We’re getting along.”

Trump’s repeated insistence that the summit meeting would only be an initial step, rather than a place to cut a deal, built on language he started using in the past week.

In traditiona­l negotiatio­ns, heads of state meet only at the end of negotiatio­ns, after lower-level officials have hammered out details for an agreement. That has not happened this time, as Trump has been eager to press the flesh with Kim Jong Un since March, when South Korean officials reported to him that the North Koreans had proferred an invitation.

That tempering of his own enthusiasm marks a notable shift for the president. Just over a month ago, Trump floated the possibilit­y of holding the summit meeting in the Demilitari­zed Zone between North and South Korea, suggesting that would be the most fitting spot for the triumph he was hoping for, if not outright expecting.

“There’s something I like about it, because you’re there, if things work out, there’s a great celebratio­n to be had on the site, not in a third-party country,” he said then. “The United States has never been closer to potentiall­y having something happen with respect to the Korean Peninsula, that can get rid of the nuclear weapons, can create so many good things, so many positive things, and peace and safety for the world.”

But his advisers have cautioned him that a deal to curb or eliminate North Korea’s nuclear stockpile could take months to reach — if not more — and then years or decades to carry out.

The latest attempt to revive the summit began Thursday with talks in New York between Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol. The four-star general is under multiple U.S. sanctions, and he needed a State Department waivers to visit New York and Washington.

That diplomatic gesture, and the welcome he received in the Oval Office, were a sign of the White House’s eagerness for a breakthrou­gh with the isolated nuclear- President Donald Trump talks with Kim Yong Chol, former North Korean military intelligen­ce chief. armed regime.

Just months ago, Trump and Kim Jong Un were trading crude insults — “Little Rocket Man” versus “mentally deranged U.S. dotard,” among others — and threatenin­g to launch nuclear war with what Trump called “fire and fury like the world has never seen.”

And just eight days ago, Trump wrote a terse letter to Kim Jong Un calling off the summit but leaving a window open for further talks.

Since then, the two government­s have engaged in intense bouts of diplomacy in New York, Singapore and in the Demilitari­zed Zone to see if the summit should go forward.

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ANDREW HARNIK/AP

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