Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No budging on no nukes in Korea, Trump asserts

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jenna Johnson and Anna Fifield of The Washington Post; by Hyung-Jin Kim, Foster Klug, Kim Tong-hyung, Lolita Baldor, Josh Lederman, Catherine Lucey, Jennifer Peltz and Christophe­r Bodeen of The Associated Pr

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he will continue to insist on the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, despite threats from North Korean officials to cancel a June 12 summit.

Trump said North Korea has not directly told the White House that it wants to change or cancel the summit, so he has not made any decisions.

“We haven’t seen anything. We haven’t heard anything,” Trump told a small group of reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday, as he welcomed Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev to the White House. “We will see what happens, whatever is.”

When asked if he thinks North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is bluffing, Trump repeated: “We’ll see what happens.”

As reporters were ushered out of the Oval Office, one asked the president if he will continue to insist on the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula. Trump responded with a simple “yes.”

The North Korean regime on Tuesday protested joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises taking place in South

Korea and cast doubt on the planned summit with Trump and members of his administra­tion, scheduled for June 12 in Singapore. A North Korean official on Wednesday repeated demands that the United States stop insisting the North unilateral­ly abandon its nuclear weapons program and stop talking about a Libya-style solution to the standoff.

Senior officials from the two Koreas were to sit down Wednesday at a border village to discuss how to implement their leaders’ recent agreement to improve ties. But hours before the meeting was to start, the North informed the South that it would “indefinite­ly suspend” the talks due to the U.S. and South Korea’s “Max Thunder” military drills, according to Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry.

The Unificatio­n Ministry, which is responsibl­e for inter-Korean affairs, called North Korea’s move “regrettabl­e” and urged a quick return to talks. The South’s Yonhap News Agency reported Wednesday that the U.S. won’t send B-52 bombers for the military drills, citing unidentifi­ed local military and government officials.

The South Korean Defense Ministry said in a text message that the allies would proceed with the exercises as planned.

China, North Korea’s top trading partner and ally, called on both sides to “avoid further provocatio­n.”

Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters Wednesday in Beijing that North Korea and the U. S. should ensure the summit proceeds as planned and yields “substantia­l outcomes.”

“Only in this way can we consolidat­e the alleviatio­n of the situation and maintain peace and stability in the region,” Lu said.

In negotiatio­ns over the years, North Korea has repeatedly threatened to walk out over disagreeme­nts and has on occasion actually walked out. In that respect, the North’s move was not surprising and underscore­d analysts’ warnings that North Korea will not give up its nuclear weapons easily.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Wednesday that the administra­tion is “still hopeful” that the summit will take place and that threats from North Korea to scrap the meeting were “something that we fully expected.”

She said Trump is “ready for very tough negotiatio­ns” with the North, adding that “if they want to meet, we’ll be ready, and if they don’t that’s OK.” She said that if there is no meeting, the U.S. would “continue with the campaign of maximum pressure” against the North.

“We are trying to be both optimistic and realistic at the same time,” national security adviser John Bolton said Wednesday morning on Fox News Radio’s The Brian Kilmeade Show. “I think that’s where the president is: We are going to do everything we can to come to a successful meeting, but we are not going to back away from the objective of that meeting, which is complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of North Korea.”

Kim Kye Gwan, North Korea’s first vice foreign minister, said in a statement carried by state media earlier Wednesday that “we are no longer interested in a negotiatio­n that will be all about driving us into a corner and making a one-sided demand for us to give up our nukes, and this would force us to reconsider whether we would accept the North Korea-U.S. summit meeting.”

He criticized recent comments by Bolton and other U.S. officials who have said the North should follow the “Libyan model” of nuclear disarmamen­t, and he took issue with U.S. views that the North should fully relinquish its biological and chemical weapons.

“Our country is neither Libya nor Iraq, which have met a miserable fate,” Kim said. “It is absolutely absurd to dare compare the [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea], a nuclear weapon state, to Libya, which had been at the initial stage of nuclear developmen­t.”

Some analysts said that bringing up Libya, which dismantled its rudimentar­y nuclear program in the 2000s in exchange for sanctions relief, jeopardize­s progress in negotiatio­ns with the North.

Kim Jong Un took power weeks after former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s grisly death at the hands of insurgent forces amid a popular uprising in October 2011. The North has frequently used Gadhafi’s death to justify its own nuclear developmen­t in the face of perceived U.S. threats.

Still, analysts said it’s unlikely that North Korea intends to scuttle all diplomacy. More likely, they said, is that it wants to gain leverage ahead of the summit between Kim and Trump.

The North’s reaction is more like a “complaint over Trump’s way of playing the good cop and bad cop game with [ Secretary of State Mike] Pompeo and Bolton,” said Kim Dong-yub, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies.

 ?? AP/Yonhap/PARK CHUL-HONG ?? A U.S. F-22 stealth fighter lands Wednesday at an air base in Gwangju, South Korea, during U.S.-South Korean military exercises that North Korea’s news agency called “an intended military provocatio­n.”
AP/Yonhap/PARK CHUL-HONG A U.S. F-22 stealth fighter lands Wednesday at an air base in Gwangju, South Korea, during U.S.-South Korean military exercises that North Korea’s news agency called “an intended military provocatio­n.”
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 ?? AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON ?? South Korean soldiers get a look at North Korea on Wednesday at the Imjingak Pavilion near the border village of Panmunjom.
AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON South Korean soldiers get a look at North Korea on Wednesday at the Imjingak Pavilion near the border village of Panmunjom.

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