Trump, Abe plan to meet before summit
TOKYO — With efforts being made to reinstate the planned summit meeting between President Donald Trump and North Korea’s leader, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan is not taking any chances.
After speaking with Trump by telephone Monday, Abe told reporters in Tokyo that he and the president had “agreed to meet before the U.S.-North Korea summit.”
Abe has been concerned that Trump might make a nuclear disarmament deal with North Korea that protects the United States but does not address Tokyo’s worries about the North’s short-range missiles that could hit Japan.
By offering to meet with the Trump before he heads to Singapore, Abe hopes to be one of the last advisers to have his ear before he meets with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un.
The White House said in a statement that Trump and Abe had agreed Monday to cooperate on the “shared imperative” of seeking the “complete and permanent dismantlement” of North Korea’s nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and missile programs.
The statement said the two leaders had agreed to meet again in advance of “the expected meeting between the United States and North Korea.”
According to NHK, Japan’s public broadcaster, Abe — who met with President Vladimir Putin of Russia over the weekend — conveyed both Japan’s and Russia’s support for the summit meeting to go forward.
Less than 24 hours after canceling the event with a letter to North Korea’s leader Thursday, Trump hinted that it might still proceed as planned. By Sunday, diplomatic and technical experts from the United States and North Korea had met in the North Korean part of the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two Koreas in an effort to salvage the summit meeting, which was planned for June 12 in Singapore.
Delegations from the United States and North Korea arrived in Singapore on Monday evening, according to the South Korean news agency Yonhap. Negotiations over logistics and other issues related to the possible summit meeting are expected to begin Tuesday. The North Korean delegation is led by Kim Chang Son, a top logistics and protocol official, Yonhap said.
Abe has also repeatedly asked Trump to raise the issue of Japanese citizens kidnapped by North Korea four decades ago.
Of the countries seeking to influence negotiations with North Korea, Japan has consistently called for complete and immediate denuclearization.
It has remained highly skeptical about North Korea’s intentions, reminding the United States that the North has signed and reneged on multiple previous nuclear deals.