Baltimore Sun

S. Korea urges plan on nukes as Kim visits China

- By Christophe­r Bodeen

BEIJING — South Korea urged North Korea on Wednesday to present a plan with concrete steps toward denucleari­zation, raising the pressure on leader Kim Jong Un as he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in a visit designed to convey the countries’ growing closeness.

Kim and Xi held a second day of talks at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse, whose grounds China’s Xinhua News Agency described as being full of “verdant greenery and splendid flowers,” adding to what the government outlet said was the “close and friendly atmosphere” of the talks.

The pomp and circumstan­ce l ooked geared toward showing off the major improvemen­t in relations between the communist neighbors, along with China’s important role in keeping North Korea on track. But it cast no new light on the main question that hangs over the previously reclusive North Korean leader’s surge in diplomatic activity in recent months: What next steps, if any, will Kim take to dismantle his country’s nuclear program?

At his summit with U.S. President Donald Trump last week in Singapore, Kim pledged to work toward denucleari­zation in exchange for U.S. security guarantees. The U.S. and South Korea also suspended a major joint military exercise that was planned for August in what was seen as a major victory for North Korea and its chief allies, China and Russia.

Chinese state media quoted Xi as hailing the warming friendship with Kim but included no mention of any specific discus- Chinese paramilita­ry police march to the Beijing airport Wednesday to prepare for the departure of Kim Jong Un. sions on making progress on the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

In Seoul, South Korean President Moon Jae-in urged North Korea to present actionable plans on how it will scrap its nuclear program and for the United States to swiftly take unspecifie­d correspond­ing measures.

“It’s necessary for North Korea to present far more concrete denucleari­zation plans, and I think it’s necessary for the United States to swiftly reciprocat­e by coming up with comprehens­ive measures,” Moon said. Moon’s office said he made the remarks to Russian media ahead of his trip to Moscow later this week.

Moon, who has met with Kim twice i n recent months, said the North Korean leader is willing to give up his nuclear program and focus on economic developmen­t if he’s provided with a reliable security guarantee. Moon described Kim as “forthright,” “careful” and “polite.”

China backs the North’s call for a “phased and synchronou­s” approach to denucleari­zation, as opposed to Washington’s demand for an instant, total and irreversib­le end to the North’s nuclear programs.

Kim left for Pyongyang later in the day, ending his third visit to China this year. State television showed Kim visiting an agricultur­al technology park and rail traffic control center in Beijing, accompanie­d by Beijing’s top official, Cai Qi.

Kim’s motorcade had been seen leaving the North Korean Embassy on Wednesday as police closed off major roads and intersecti­ons in central Beijing. Gawking pedestrian­s watched the passing motorcade that included Kim’s limousine.

A report by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said Kim told Xi at a welcoming banquet Tuesday that North KoreaChina ties are developing into “unpreceden­tedly special relations.”

China has touted the prospects of more trade and investment if North Korea makes progress in talks on abandoning its nuclear weapons and long-range missile programs.

That could allow the lifting of U.N. Security Council economic sanctions that have hamstrung North Korea’s foreign trade, although the U.S. insists those measures can only be eased after the North shows it has ended its nuclear programs. The U.S. says China is in agreement on that point, although Chinese officials say sanctions should not be an end in themselves.

 ?? GREG BAKER/GETTY-AFP ??
GREG BAKER/GETTY-AFP

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