Santa Fe New Mexican

Pompeo: Sanctions remain until N. Korea denucleari­zes

- By Jane Perlez and Choe Sang-Hun

BEIJING — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Asian powers Thursday that President Donald Trump was sticking to demands that North Korea surrender its nuclear weapons, as he sought to hold together a fragile consensus on maintainin­g tough sanctions against the North despite Trump’s declaratio­n that it was “no longer a nuclear threat.”

At a news conference in Seoul, South Korea, Pompeo softened some of the president’s recent comments — but did not retract them — and insisted that U.N. sanctions would remain in place until North Korea had accomplish­ed “complete denucleari­zation.”

“We are going to get the complete denucleari­zation,” Pompeo told reporters. “Only then will there be relief from sanctions.”

He made the same point later Thursday in Beijing, where he met with China’s president, Xi Jinping. But China had already shown signs of breaking ranks on tough enforcemen­t of the sanctions against its neighbor and trading partner, saying that with North Korea now at the negotiatin­g table, they could legitimate­ly be eased.

China did not appear to have budged from that position Thursday. At a news conference alongside China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, Pompeo conceded that the U.N. sanctions had “mechanisms for relief ” and said that “we have agreed at the appropriat­e time they will be considered.” But he insisted that time would

be after “full denucleari­zation.”

Wang, who said China was intent on playing “a constructi­ve role” in connection with the North, declined to answer a question about China’s intentions on the sanctions.

Pompeo’s tough stance Thursday — two days after Trump met North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, in Singapore for the first-ever summit between leaders of their two countries — was intended to reassure U.S. allies Japan and South Korea, and to deny reports in North Korea’s state media that the United States had agreed to ease the sanctions. They were also a clear appeal for cooperatio­n from Beijing.

North Korean state media Wednesday reported that Trump had agreed to lift sanctions when relations improved and that he had endorsed a “step-by-step” denucleari­zation process, rather than immediate and total dismantlem­ent. Adding to global

confusion were comments by Trump that the world can “sleep well tonight” because “there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea.”

Pompeo said in Seoul, where he conferred with the foreign ministers of South Korea and Japan, that those remarks were made with “eyes wide open.”

tive.” Even Pentagon officials were caught off guard by Trump’s announceme­nt.

In Seoul, Pompeo sought to allay fears that Trump had given away too much. He insisted the Trump administra­tion’s approach was superior to those of previous administra­tions.

Pompeo said the United States and its allies remained committed to achieving a “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of North Korea,” but he said more negotiatio­ns to get there would be necessary. It will be “a process,” he said, adding, “not an easy one.”

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, left, and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right, listen to South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha during a joint news conference Thursday in Seoul, South Korea.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, left, and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right, listen to South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha during a joint news conference Thursday in Seoul, South Korea.

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