Dayton Daily News

U.S.: N. Korea hasn’t started process of denucleari­zation

Pressure continues 2 months after historic summit.

- By Felicia Sonmez

National security adviser John Bolton said Tuesday that North Korea has not made progress toward denucleari­zation in a dismal acknowledg­ment that comes nearly two months after President Donald Trump held a historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

“The United States has lived up to the Singapore declaratio­n. It’s just North Korea that has not taken the steps we feel are necessary to denuclear- ize,” Bolton said in an inter- view on Fox News Channel on Tuesday morning.

He added the United States will continue to apply pressure until Pyongyang produces results.

“The idea that we’re going to relax the sanctions just on North Korea’s say-so, I think, is something that just isn’t under considerat­ion,” Bolton said.

“We’re going to continue to apply maximum pressure to North Korea until they denucleari­ze, just as we are to Iran.”

The Trump administra­tion has consistent­ly sought to reassure critics that Kim will make good on his pledges to denucleari­ze. Last month, Trump tweeted he had “con- fidence that Kim Jong Un will honor the contract we signed &, even more importantl­y, our handshake” in Singapore.

Yet the most tangible result of the June 12 summit so far has been last week’s hando- ver by North Korea of the remains of more than 50 ser- vice members killed in the Korean War. The question of denucleari­zation remains a separate one, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has said, and U.S. and North Korean diplomats traded jabs on the issue at last weekend’s annual conference of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

At that conference, also in Singapore, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo handed to North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho a letter from Trump to Kim.

Bolton revealed Tuesday the letter contained a proposal from Trump for Pompeo to make another visit to North Korea to meet with Kim.

“Secretary of State Pompeo is prepared to go back to North Korea to meet with Kim Jong Un. We’ve proposed that in our most recent letter from the president to Kim Jong Un,” Bolton said.

“The president’s prepared to meet at any point,” he added. “But what we really need is not more rhetoric. What we need is performanc­e from North Korea on denucleari­zation.”

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