Los Angeles Times

Pompeo pushes for nuclear deal

Talks with a top North Korean official seek enough of an agreement to allow the summit to occur.

- By Barbara Demick barbara.demick @latimes.com Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson and special correspond­ent Eli Stokols in Washington contribute­d to this report.

NEW YORK — Let’s call it microwave diplomacy.

In what is likely to be a feverish 24 hours of negotiatio­ns, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is trying to hash out enough of a denucleari­zation agreement to allow President Trump to meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in less than two weeks.

The proposed venue and date are clear — June 12 in Singapore. Hotel rooms are tentativel­y booked. Planes are at the ready. Logistics teams are working out kinks. To the bemusement of latenight comedians, the commemorat­ive coin for the Trump-Kim summit is already minted.

All that is missing is the deal: The North Koreans have not agreed to the immediate — or even the staged — dismantlem­ent of their nuclear weapons arsenal and infrastruc­ture that the White House has demanded.

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Wednesday that Pompeo and North Korean emissary Kim Yong Chol would discuss “the denucleari­zation of the peninsula,” and as long as that remained the focus “we’re going to continue to shoot for June 12.”

Yet Pompeo faces many obstacles.

Although the New York session marks Pompeo’s third sit-down with Kim Yong Chol, a four-star general who is North Korea’s former spy chief, Pompeo is a neophyte in nuclear diplomacy. The former Kansas congressma­n has been secretary of State for barely a month, after serving a little more than a year as CIA director.

Kim Yong Chol has been a top aide of North Korea’s ruling dynasty since the days of Kim Il Sung, grandfathe­r of the current leader. He headed North Korea’s principal arms dealing apparatus and has been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury for that and other action. To visit New York, he had to obtain a special waiver from the State Department.

“Pompeo is a smart guy, but he doesn’t have experience with this. Kim Yong Chol has been involved in every negotiatio­n since 1992. He can beat any American who goes up against him,” said a veteran U.S.-North Korea negotiator who asked not to be quoted by name.

Pompeo also faces opposition in Washington. Trump’s national security advisor, John Bolton, a longtime advocate of a change of government in Pyongyang, nearly sabotaged the summit with provocativ­e comments suggesting the surrender of Libya’s nuclear infrastruc­ture in 2003 would be a model for North Korea.

North Korean leaders recoiled at the comparison with Libya, whose leader Moammar Kadafi was ignominiou­sly killed and mutilated by rebels aided by Western air power less than a decade after he had given up his nuclear program.

It didn’t help that the CIA, which Pompeo headed until last month, concluded in a recent intelligen­t assessment that North Korea has no intention of denucleari­zing. The assessment did note that the North Koreans would like an American hamburger restaurant in Pyongyang, according to NBC, which broke the story.

Experts debate whether North Korea will eventually give up its nuclear arsenal, but there is near unanimity that it won’t do it upfront without significan­t U.S. concession­s in return.

“To eliminate everything upfront and virtually all at once is tantamount to a North Korean surrender scenario. It is unimaginab­le,” concluded a report released this week by Stanford University’s Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n. The report said it could take at least a decade to fully dismantle the nuclear program.

North Korea has said it will not give up what it calls its “treasured sword” unless it is certain the United States has abandoned a “hostile policy” against it.

“It will take them watching American behavior over a long period of time, through more than one administra­tion,” said Leon V. Sigal, director of the Northeast Asia Cooperativ­e Security Project of the New Yorkbased Social Science Research Council.

The Trump administra­tion has veered between demands for instant denucleari­zation and a step-by-step approach. The White House position is that North Korea must agree to complete verifiable irreversib­le denucleari­zation, or CVID in diplomatic shorthand.

“Trump would like to get it all at once, but if he can’t, he’s making space for a phased-in denucleari­zation,” said Scott Snyder, North Korea analyst with the nonpartisa­n Council on Foreign Relations.

Echoing several analysts, Jung Pak, senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institute think tank, cautioned against the evident lack of preparatio­n.

“Usually with a summit, the rule is no surprises: Every ‘i’ is dotted and every ‘t’ is crossed before it starts,” said Pak, a former CIA analyst specializi­ng in the Koreas. “This time we can’t even agree on what denucleari­zation means.”

Pak said she expected the summit to go forward because Trump is so invested, and the North Koreans are so determined that it happen. “Kim Yong Chol will dangle just enough in front of Pompeo [so] that he can go back to Trump and say, without lying, they’re sincere,” Pak said.

Other points of contention have to do with whether to include North Korea’s biological and chemical weapons in a deal and whether North Korea would be allowed to maintain a civilian nuclear or space program.

The Trump administra­tion has cobbled together a new team of North Korea specialist­s, trying to make up for the exodus of seasoned experts during the tumultuous last year.

Sung Kim, a former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, has been temporaril­y reassigned from his post as envoy to the Philippine­s to lead a U.S. advance team now meeting a counterpar­t North Korean team in the buffer zone between the two Koreas. (The Trump administra­tion has no ambassador in Seoul. Adm. Harry Harris, head of the U.S. Pacific Command, was nominated on May 18 and awaits Senate confirmati­on.)

Andrew Kim, head of the CIA’s Korea Mission Center, formed last year when Pompeo was CIA director, has been assigned to work with the secretary of State. He accompanie­d Pompeo on his two trips to Pyongyang and is with him in New York.

While other teams are still working out logistics, the meetings in New York between Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol, which will continue on Thursday, are dealing with the substance of the proposed summit. They most likely will determine whether this on-again, offagain summit will actually take place.

Administra­tion officials declined to discuss in detail the issues that Pompeo and Kim are debating in New York, but the potential agenda is wide open.

“Trump is focused on having a historic meeting, but unless that event translates into setting mutually defined objectives, it will be meaningles­s,” Snyder said.

 ?? Andres Kudacki Associated Press ?? NORTH KOREAN emissary Kim Yong Chol, center, leaves a hotel in New York. His talks with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will continue on Thursday.
Andres Kudacki Associated Press NORTH KOREAN emissary Kim Yong Chol, center, leaves a hotel in New York. His talks with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will continue on Thursday.

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