U.S.: No concessions to N. Korea in talks
Trump administration officials said Sunday that the United States had made no concessions to the North Korean regime in exchange for what would be a historic meeting between President Donald Trump and the reclusive nation’s leader, Kim Jong Un.
But the White House also left open the possibility that the talks, which South Korean officials have said would happen by the end of May, could ultimately not occur — particularly if the North Koreans conduct nuclear or missile tests in coming weeks.
“There’s the possibility,” White House principal deputy press secretary Raj Shah said on ABC News’s This Week of the prospects of the talks falling through. “If it does, it’s the North Koreans’ fault. They have not lived up to the promises that they made.”
The conditions that Trump has set, according to administration officials, is that Kim would halt any nuclear or missile testing until the talks occur and allow joint military exercises between the South Korea and the United States to proceed. The regime has also committed to saying “complete, verifiable, irreversible denuclearization” is on the table, CIA Director Mike Pompeo said Sunday.
“These are real achievements. These are conditions that the North Korean regime has never submitted to in exchange for conversations,” Pompeo said on Fox News Sunday. “Never before have we had the North Korean in a position where their economy was at such risk and where their leadership was under such pressure that they would begin conversations on the terms that Kim Jong Un has conceded to.”
He said the administration had given Kim “nothing” in exchange for Trump agreeing to meet with him and added: “While these negotiations are going on, there will be no concessions made.”
Pompeo, who has secured a bond with Trump in part by reliably praising him in public, implied that Trump’s often personal attacks on Kim were among those pressure points, saying on CBS News’ Face the Nation that U.S. intelligence officials had briefed Trump on how Kim “might react and how North Korea might respond.”
But it is hard to differentiate the way Trump has treated Kim on Twitter — referring to him derisively as “Little Rocket Man,” for example — from the way he mocks most adversaries, including the press and political opponents.
The White House stunned Washington with its surprise announcement Thursday that the administration had accepted overtures from Kim to meet directly with Trump — a statement that Trump himself teased with an impromptu visit to the briefing room. No sitting U.S. president has met directly with the leader of North Korea, which wants to be legitimized on the world stage, particularly alongside a global superpower such as the United States.
No specific date or location has been announced for the Trump-Kim discussions, and administration officials downplayed the significance of where the talks would be held.
“President Trump isn’t doing this for theater. He’s going to solve a problem,” Pompeo said. “What’s most important is what’s discussed and the clarity and the strength and resolve of this president and this administration to achieve the outcome that Americans so desperately deserve.”
Shah said no location was “being ruled out” for the discussions, although he said the prospect of Trump heading to North Korea was not “highly likely.”
“We don’t have an announcement right now, but we have accepted this offer and we hope that it can be the part of an important breakthrough,” Shah said.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on NBC News’s Meet the Press that Trump will demand that Kim dismantle his nuclear weapons program. “That’s the objective, and that’s what we’re going to accomplish,” he said. And Mnuchin dismissed unnamed Trump officials in a New York Times report who assigned less-than-even odds of the meeting actually happening. “I would expect the meeting goes forward. I don’t know why anybody would be handicapping this at 50 percent,” he said.