Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Tillerson’s stance on talks with North Korea unclear

- By Tracy Wilkinson Washington Bureau tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Rex Tillerson took the rare step Friday of sharing a public stage with a senior North Korean official but fanned confusion about the Trump administra­tion’s stance toward formal negotiatio­ns with Pyongyang over its nuclear arms.

According to a draft of his remarks circulated before a special session of the U.N. Security Council, Tillerson planned to say the U.S. would not demand preconditi­ons to talks, apart from a “sustained cessation of North Korea’s threatenin­g behavior” — that is, a pause in its provocativ­e missile launches.

When Tillerson actually spoke, however, he omitted the reference to no preconditi­ons and added, “North Korea must earn its way back to the table.”

His altered remarks came days after the White House issued a statement that implied disagreeme­nt with Tillerson’s openness to talks with North Korea.

State Department officials would not comment on why the change was made, except to say that Tillerson often revises speeches up to the time of delivery.

The White House statement earlier this week followed Tillerson’s appearance at the Atlantic Council think tank in Washington in which he appeared to break new ground by saying there would be no preconditi­ons to talks.

Hours later, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders released the statement, which alluded to the president’s coolness to negotiatio­ns without naming Tillerson: “The president’s views on North Korea have not changed. North Korea’s actions are not good for anyone and certainly not good for North Korea.”

On Friday, Tillerson insisted there was “no daylight” between him and Trump on North Korea.

Yet the chain of events recalled Trump’s public rebuke of his top diplomat in October, when the president said Tillerson was “wasting his time” by attempting to coax Pyongyang into talks. Trump acted just after Tillerson had met with China’s leaders on the subject.

Speaking to reporters after his U.N. speech, Tillerson said the United States was militarily prepared to respond “should something go wrong” but that he continued to hope diplomacy would prevail. He added that the “communicat­ion channels remain open.”

In his speech, Tillerson said a U.S.-led “pressure campaign” that includes rallying countries across the globe to join in enforcing economic and diplomatic sanctions against North Korea “must and will continue until denucleari­zation is achieved.”

Sitting across the Security Council’s marble floor was North Korea’s delegate to the U.N., Ja Song Nam, who had been invited to participat­e. He said his country’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons was for defense against U.S. “threats and blackmail.”

Trump, in Washington, was asked by reporters if he would support unconditio­nal talks with North Korea, but he did not answer directly.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens as North Korean Ambassador Ja Song Nam speaks at the U.N.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens as North Korean Ambassador Ja Song Nam speaks at the U.N.

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