Orlando Sentinel

The U.S. and North Korea

But Pompeo sees some ‘progress’ in Pyongyang talks

- By Tracy Wilkinson

gave starkly contrastin­g reports Saturday after two days of talks intended to firm up Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear weapons systems.

WASHINGTON — The United States and North Korea gave contrastin­g reports Saturday at the end of two days of talks intended to firm up Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear weapons systems.

The different descriptio­ns raised fears that disarmamen­t negotiatio­ns may be doomed before they really begin.

While Secretary of State Mike Pompeo claimed limited “progress” in “productive” meetings, North Korea expressed “regret” over the talks and accused the Trump administra­tion of making unfair “unilateral and gangsterli­ke” demands.

Within hours of Pompeo’s departure Saturday from the North Korean capital of Pyongyang, its Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying U.S. demands might lead to “a dangerous phase that might rattle our willingnes­s for denucleari­zation that had been firm.”

Pompeo offered no details of his talks with North Korea’s former spy chief Kim Yong Chol nor did he outline any visible gains.

He flew to Tokyo without meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, in contrast to his two previous trips to Pyongyang in the last three months.

The meetings in Pyongyang were the first follow-up to the June 12 summit in Singapore, when President Donald Trump and Kim signed a brief, vague agreement to “work toward the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.”

The agreement left all details to future talks. This first session underscore­s how complicate­d and arduous negotiatio­ns will be to persuade Kim to abandon the nuclear program he and his father and grandfathe­r spent decades building.

The Singapore communique also said the two government­s would revive a program of repatriati­ng the remains of U.S. military personnel killed in the Korean War.

North Korea has yet to comply with that step.

Pompeo said Pentagon officials would meet with North Korean counterpar­ts Thursday, probably along the Demilitari­zed Zone that separates North and South Korea, to discuss repatriati­ons.

On more than one occasion, though, Trump has falsely claimed that some remains have already been repatriate­d, as the Huffington Post first reported.

“We got back our great fallen heroes, the remains. In fact today, already 200 have been sent back,” Trump said during a rally June 20 in Duluth, Minn.

He repeated that claim in subsequent rallies in Las Vegas and West Columbia, S.C.

Pompeo, speaking on the tarmac of the Pyongyang airport, said that working groups were being formed from both government­s to begin talks about the destructio­n of North Korea’s missileeng­ine testing facility.

“These are complicate­d issues, but we made progress on almost all the central issues,” he told a group of reporters traveling with him.

Earlier, Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol, acting as his government’s chief negotiator, used nearly identical language to say they had important “things to clarify.”

There was no immediate reaction from Pompeo or other administra­tion officials to Pyongyang’s more gloomy accounting of the talks.

Before he departed Pyongyang, Pompeo bade farewell to Kim Yong Chol, who could be heard over the sounds of airplane engines saying, “We will produce an outcome, results.”

In his comments to reporters, Pompeo appeared dismissive of new satellite imagery that shows rapid infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts at Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center, the main nuclear facility north of Pyongyang, according to nuclear researcher­s and other experts.

Images also showed the testing of a nuclear-reactor cooling system at Yongbyon.

“No one walked away from” agreeing to complete denucleari­zation, Pompeo said. “They’re still equally committed. Chairman Kim is still committed . ... We had productive, good-faith negotiatio­ns.”

He added that he raised “what the North Koreans are continuing to do” and how “we can get our arms around” achieving the commitment­s in the Singapore summit.

Pompeo was asked to provide details on two of the key components of any eventual disarmamen­t by North Korea: a complete inventory of its weapons of mass destructio­n and a timeline for how the arsenal would be dismantled.

“I’m not going to get into details of our conversati­ons, but we spent a good deal of time talking about each of those two things,” Pompeo said, “and I think we made progress in every element of our discussion­s.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY-AFP POOL ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says goodbye to North Korean officials Saturday after denucleari­zation talks — the first follow-up to the June 12 summit — in Pyongyang.
ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY-AFP POOL Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says goodbye to North Korean officials Saturday after denucleari­zation talks — the first follow-up to the June 12 summit — in Pyongyang.

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