Imperial Valley Press

NKorea: US needs to build our trust, and sanctions lower it

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — North Korea needs more trust in the U.S. and their developing relationsh­ip before it will get rid of its nuclear weapons, Pyongyang’s top diplomat said Saturday as an envoy from another of the internatio­nal community’s biggest worries — Syria — demanded that the U.S., France and Turkey withdraw their troops from his civil-war-wracked country.

More than three months after a June summit in Singapore between the U.S. and North Korean leaders, Ri told world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly that the North doesn’t see a “correspond­ing response” from the U.S. to North Korea’s early disarmamen­t moves. Instead, he noted, the U.S. is continuing sanctions aimed at keeping up pressure.

“The perception that sanctions can bring us on our knees is a pipe dream of the people who are ignorant of us,” he said, adding that the continued sanctions are “deepening our mistrust” and deadlockin­g the current diplomacy.

“Without any trust in the U.S., there will be no confidence in our national security, and under such circumstan­ces there is no way we will unilateral­ly disarm ourselves first,” Ri said, adding that the North’s commitment to disarming is “solid and firm,” but that trust is crucial.

Washington is wary of easing sanctions or agreeing to another of the North’s priorities — a declaratio­n ending the Korean War — without Pyongyang first making significan­t disarmamen­t moves.

Officials at the United States’ U.N. mission didn’t immediatel­y respond to an inquiry about Ri’s comments, which came as U.S. President Donald Trump and his secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, are trying to regain momentum in their quest to get North Korea to renounce its nuclear ambitions.

Pompeo is planning to visit Pyongyang next month to prepare for a second KimTrump summit.

Both Kim and Trump want to meet again. But there is widespread skepticism that Pyongyang is serious about renouncing an arsenal that the country likely sees as the only way to guarantee its safety.

Pompeo and Ri met on the sidelines of the General Assembly Wednesday for what Pompeo described as a “very positive” discussion. He did not give any details.

The North has traditiona­lly said that the nuclear standoff is between it and the United States, but recent summits between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in have also dealt with the nuclear issue.

Nuclear envoys from the U.S. and ally South Korea have met three times during this week’s U.N. meetings to talk about ways to end North Korea’s pursuit of an arsenal of nuclear-armed long-range missiles.

Like North Korea, Syria could be on the cusp of significan­t developmen­ts.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem declared Saturday that his country’s “battle against terrorism is almost over” after more than seven years of civil war.

He demanded that U.S., French and Turkish troops pull out of the country immediatel­y, calling them “occupation forces” that are there illegally, without the government’s invitation.

The U.S., which has around 2,000 troops in northern Syria, worked with Syrian Kurdish-led fighters to help rout the Islamic State extremist group from all urban areas in Syria and is continuing to tackle pockets of IS militants in the country.

 ??  ?? Syrian Deputy Prime Minister Walid al-Moallem addresses the 73rd session the United Nations General Assembly, on Saturday at U.N. headquarte­rs. AP Photo/MAry AltAffer
Syrian Deputy Prime Minister Walid al-Moallem addresses the 73rd session the United Nations General Assembly, on Saturday at U.N. headquarte­rs. AP Photo/MAry AltAffer

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