New York Daily News

HE’S NOT OUT TO LAUNCH!

Don aide: N. Korea meet sign of strength

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

THE WHITE HOUSE on Friday painted President Trump’s decision to sit down with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un as a sign of control, not compromise.

Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the in-theworks meeting between the two leaders is validation of the administra­tion’s hard-line approach to the rogue nation.

A mix of sanctions and Trump’s combative rhetoric have hammered Kim’s government into discussing “denucleari­zation,” Sanders said.

“Again, this meeting won’t take place without concrete actions that match the promises that have been made by North Korea,” she added.

No U.S. President has ever met with a North Korean leader.

But critics are wary of the idea of a face-to-face, fearing it gives Kim exactly what he wants — legitimacy.

“To be clear — we need to talk to North Korea. But Kim is not inviting Trump so that he can surrender North Korea’s weapons,” tweeted Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonprolife­ration Program at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey. “Kim is inviting Trump to demonstrat­e that his investment in nuclear and missile capabiliti­es has forced the United States to treat him as an equal.”

Asked if Trump believes Kim is sincere about scaling back the country’s nuclear and missile programs, Sanders said he is “hopeful.”

Trump is getting “exactly what he wants,” she maintained.

In an evening tweet, Trump suggested the sitdown was a work in progress.

“The deal with North Korea is very much in the making and will be, if completed, a very good one for the World. Time and place to be determined,” the tweet said.

South Korean officials, briefing Trump at the White House on Thursday following a recent meeting with Kim in Pyongyang, told White House officials that the North Korean leader expressed a commitment to denucleari­zation.

Kim also pledged to halt nuclear and missile testing, but said his main interest was meeting Trump.

The meeting is a stark reversal from the war of words the two men exchanged as North Korea ramped up its missile tests during Trump’s first year in Washington, fueling fears of war.

Pyongyang repeatedly threatened to fire rockets at the U.S. territory of Guam and continues to condemn joint military exercises by the U.S and South Korea.

Administra­tion officials pushed back against the idea that Trump has given in to the fancies of a small-time tyrant with a growing nuclear arsenal.

“Let’s be very clear. The United States has made zero concession­s, but North Korea has made some promises,” Sanders said.

White House Legislativ­e Affairs Director Marc Short said Trump had discussed his decision with a “handful” of lawmakers, but wouldn’t reveal names. But aides described the decision as a personal, impulsive move made by the President alone, according to the Financial Times.

 ??  ?? Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders (below) says Trump (left) is “hopeful” Kim Jong Un (right) is sincere about scaling back North Korea’s nuclear program.
Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders (below) says Trump (left) is “hopeful” Kim Jong Un (right) is sincere about scaling back North Korea’s nuclear program.
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