Dayton Daily News

Pompeo’s time in N. Korea a step to Trump meeting

- By Nick Wadhams and Jihye Lee

President WASHINGTON —

Donald Trump said Sunday that he hopes to see North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “in the near future” after his top diplomat reported progress Sunday at a meeting with Kim in Pyongyang held to resolve details of a potential second summit.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told South Korean President Moon Jae-in upon his arrival in Seoul that Kim had agreed to meet with Trump “as soon as possible,” according to a statement from Moon’s office.

The South Koreans said the United States and North Korea discussed establishi­ng negotiatin­g groups to set a “denucleari­zation process” and work out a time and location for a follow-up meeting to the first TrumpKim summit in June.

“As President Trump said, there are many steps along the way, and we took one of them today,” Pompeo told Moon in Seoul. “It was another step forward.”

Pompeo “had a good meeting with Chairman Kim today in Pyongyang,” Trump said Sunday on Twitter. “Progress made on Singapore Summit Agreements! I look forward to seeing Chairman Kim again, in the near future.”

A U.S. official traveling with Pompeo said the visit to North Korea was “better than” Pompeo’s fraught previous trip to the North Korean capital in July, although there is a “long haul” ahead.

The trip was the latest turn in a diplomatic exchange in which Trump and Kim threatened each other with nuclear war last year only for them

North Korea has been asking for the United States to formally declare that the 19501953 Korean War is formally over, as a way to bring an end to hostile relations between the two countries.

The war concluded with an armistice but no peace treaty.

In the past few days, North Korea has also renewed its demands for sanctions to be eased.

— WASHINGTON POST to meet in Singapore. While the leaders signed a vague agreement to “work toward complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, the two sides have bickered over the pace and sequence of steps to achieve that goal.

Pompeo’s brief visit wasn’t expected to resolve critical issues over getting North Korea to disarm or make much progress on a peace treaty to officially end the Korean War. Kim’s regime has said it wants to focus on more than just its nuclear program, and that it expects the United States to show flexibilit­y in its demands.

The Sunday stop in Pyongyang was Pompeo’s first chance to introduce his special envoy for North Korea, Stephen Biegun, to leaders there. Pompeo had hoped to do that in August, when he appointed Biegun and announced they would travel to the country. But Trump called off the trip a day later, saying North Korea hadn’t made sufficient progress toward denucleari­zation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States