Houston Chronicle

N. Korea releases three Americans

Gesture is its most tangible move to improve relations with the U.S.

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WASHINGTON — The release of three American prisoners cleared away a last obstacle on Wednesday to a landmark nuclear summit meeting between President Donald Trump and North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un.

North Korea freed the prisoners, all Americans of Korean descent, even as the two countries finalized details for a meeting between their leaders. The move was North Korea’s most tangible gesture aimed at improving relations with the United States since Trump took office.

The resolution of the prisoner standoff hardly guaranteed success at the meeting, which will grapple with the far more complicate­d issues of North Korea’s nuclear arsenal, divisions on the peninsula and security in Asia. But U.S. officials said it sent another signal that North Korea may be serious about ending its long confrontat­ion with the U.S. and its allies after nearly seven decades of mutual antagonism.

Trump exulted over the release and publicly entertaine­d talk that he could even win a Nobel Peace Prize for his diplomacy.

He was so eager to associate himself with the freed prisoners that he decided to personally travel to Joint Base Andrews outside Washington in the middle of the night to welcome them back to the U.S., something other presidents have not typically done in similar circumstan­ces.

“Nobody thought this was going to happen, and if it did, it would be years or decades, frankly,” Trump said at the White House shortly after they were released. “Nobody thought this was going to happen. And I appreciate Kim Jong Un for doing this and allowing them to go.”

The three were handed over to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who made a second visit to Pyongyang, the North’s capital, to lock down details of the upcoming meeting between the president and Kim. Trump said it would not be held in the Demilitari­zed Zone between North and South Korea, as he had earlier suggested, and speculatio­n centered on Singapore, a neutral site that has better facilities and is close to North Korea.

‘God bless America’

The U.S. has persistent­ly demanded the release of its three citizens — Kim Dong-chul, Tony Kim and Kim Hak-song — who have all been held on charges of committing espionage or unidentifi­ed “hostile acts” against North Korea. Two of them were arrested after Trump took office last year.

“For Trump, the release validates his view that only he can effectivel­y negotiate with North Korea,” said Evan Medeiros, a former senior Asia adviser to President Barack Obama. “For Kim, it helps him undermine the maximum pressure campaign, which has probably peaked, and drives up the price and lengthens the timeline for denucleari­zation.”

The three freed prisoners issued a statement as they made their way to Washington. “We would like to express our deep appreciati­on to the United States government, President Trump, Secretary Pompeo, and the people of the United States for bringing us home,” they said. “We thank God, and all our families and friends who prayed for us and for our return. God bless America, the greatest nation in the world.”

In the first comments attributed to Kim confirming the planned meeting, the North Korean news agency said he expressed thanks to Trump for showing “deep interest in settling the issue through dialogue” and said the session would be an “excellent first step toward promotion of the positive situation developmen­t in the Korean Peninsula.”

‘Not a result of sanctions’

During his one-day trip to Pyongyang, Pompeo and senior North Korean officials exchanged optimistic words about the future of the relationsh­ip.

At a lunch of poached fish and duck, and red wine, on the 39th floor of the Koryo Hotel, Kim Yong Chol, a vice chairman of the ruling Workers’ Party and Pompeo’s main interlocut­or, said that after years of expending treasure on developing nuclear weapons, North Korea had decided to pivot to focus on improving the lives of its people.

“It is our policy to concentrat­e all efforts into economic progress in our country,” Kim said, echoing a policy shift that Kim Jong Un adopted at a party meeting last month. “I hope the United States also will be happy with our success,” he added. “I have high expectatio­ns the U.S. will play a very big role in establishi­ng peace on the Korean Peninsula.”

But he also said the decision to talk with the U.S. was “not a result of sanctions that have been imposed from outside,” despite Trump’s efforts to take credit.

Pompeo returned the friendly tone in his own toast.

“For decades, we have been adversarie­s,” he said. “Now we are hopeful that we can work together to resolve this conflict, take away threats to the world and make your country have all the opportunit­ies your people so richly deserve.”

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