San Francisco Chronicle

Pompeo cites ‘real progress’ in N.Y. talks

- By Gardiner Harris and Neil MacFarquha­r Gardiner Harris and Neil MacFarquha­r are New York Times writers.

NEW YORK — The Trump administra­tion pushed ahead with hopes for a summit soon with Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader, after talks Thursday with envoys from Pyongyang and the announceme­nt of a meeting Friday between the country’s top nuclear negotiator and President Trump.

After discussion­s in New York, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he was “confident we are moving in the right direction.”

Pompeo maintained that the United States would continue to demand a fully verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula. But he acknowledg­ed that significan­t challenges remained and predicted more “tough moments and difficult times” as the two sides negotiated.

Still, Pompeo cited “real progress” in rescheduli­ng a summit meeting between Kim and Trump that was set for June 12 in Singapore, before the U.S. president canceled it last week.

It would be “nothing short of tragic to let this opportunit­y go to waste,” Pompeo told reporters after 2½ hours of discussion­s with Kim Yong Chol, the former North Korean intelligen­ce chief and top nuclear arms negotiator.

“If these talks are successful, they will truly be historic,” he said.

The diplomacy is expected to continue Friday in Washington, where Trump is planning to receive a letter from the North Korean leader, hand-delivered by his envoys.

In remarks to reporters Thursday, Trump said it was not clear if the show of tenuous détente would be enough to strike a deal to hold the summit meeting but said negotiatio­ns between Washington and Pyongyang — which both sides hope will end decades of enmity and suspicion — are “in good hands.”

The meeting set for Friday came as a surprise even to some on Trump’s staff and he offered few details when he announced it. It would be a rare visit similar to one made to Washington in 2000 by Vice Marshal Jo Myong Rok, who was then North Korea’s secondmost-powerful official. Jo met President Bill Clinton and delivered a letter from North Korea’s leader at the time, Kim Jong Il.

Trump’s decision to personally meet the North Korean envoy displayed his eagerness to be at the center of the action for the highstakes talks.

 ?? New York Times ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo points out N.Y. landmarks to North Korea envoy, Kim Yong Chol (left).
New York Times Secretary of State Mike Pompeo points out N.Y. landmarks to North Korea envoy, Kim Yong Chol (left).

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