Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump cautious on news in Korea

South: Kim offered to relinquish nukes

- By Robert Burns and Hyung-jin Kim The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump greeted North Korea’s reported willingnes­s to negotiate away its atomic weapons with both hope and skepticism Tuesday, insisting that a potential diplomatic breakthrou­gh be tested against the North’s long history of deception and threats to target U.S. cities with nuclear missiles.

“I really believe they are sincere,” Trump said at a White House news conference, sounding more optimistic than his intelligen­ce chief, Dan Coats, who told a Senate hearing he has “very, very low confidence” that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un intends to give up his nuclear arms.

“Maybe this is a breakthrou­gh. I seriously doubt it,” Coats said.

A senior South Korean presidenti­al adviser said Tuesday that Kim had expressed a willingnes­s to discuss nuclear disarmamen­t and halt nuclear and missile tests during future talks with the United States. The North didn’t confirm those concession­s, which would amount

KOREAS

to a dramatic about-face for a nation that has frequently vowed to preserve its nuclear arsenal at any cost.

Chung Eui-yong, the South Korean official who spoke after participat­ing in talks with Kim in Pyongyang, also said the North Korean dictator had agreed to meet with South Korea’s president at a border village in late April.

Trump, who last fall told Secretary of State Rex Tillerson he was “wasting his time” trying to talk with the North, tweeted Tuesday that “possible progress” had been made in North Korea’s capital and that all sides were making serious efforts. He added: “May be false hope, but the U.S. is ready to go hard in either direction!”

Later, in an Oval Office photo session with Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven, Trump said that the North Koreans “seem to be acting positively” but that the prospects will be clearer when diplomacy moves to the next stage.

“We have come certainly a long way, at least rhetorical­ly, with

North Korea,” Trump said. Of the possibilit­y for peacefully resolving the nations’ deep difference­s, he said: “It’d be a great thing for the world, would be a great thing for North Korea, it would be a great thing for the peninsula. But we’ll see what happens.”

In Chung’s account, Kim indicated he would not need to keep nuclear weapons if military threats against North Korea were removed and his nation received a credible security guarantee. That suggests the possibilit­y Kim will insist in any deal that the U.S. withdraw its nearly 28,000 troops from South Korea. The North sees those forces and their periodic exercises with South Korean troops as a threat to invade the North.

The White House issued a brief statement from Vice President Mike Pence suggesting that nothing has changed in that area. A U.S. official said there were no plans to scrap the war games envisioned for next month.

“All options are on the table, and

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