Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

N. Korean officials fail to show for U.S. talks

The meeting was about repatriati­ng the remains of the U.S. war dead, officials said.

- By Adam Taylor

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean officials did not turn up to a Thursday meeting with the U.S. military about repatriati­ng the remains of the war dead, according to a U.S. official with knowledge of the situation.

The two sides had been expected to meet at the Korean Peninsula’s demilitari­zed zone and discuss the return of U.S. troop remains from the 1950-53 war — an arrangemen­t the State Department had announced after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to Pyongyang last Friday and Saturday.

On Thursday, however, Department of Defense and United Nations Command officials were left waiting in the DMZ’s Joint Security Area.

The expected North Korean officials never arrived, according to the official who requested anonymity as he was not permitted to talk publicly about the event.

“We were ready,” the official said. “It just didn’t happen. They didn’t show.”

A State Department spokeswoma­n declined to comment, but noted that Pompeo said after his talks in Pyongyang last week that the date for the meeting remained flexible. Just before departing Pyongyang, Pompeo said the meeting was set for Thursday but that it “could move by one day or two.”

In a statement released to reporters on Thursday, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said that North Korean military officials were now seeking a meeting with their U.S. counterpar­ts on Sunday.

It was not clear why North Korean officials did not attend the meeting Thursday or whether they had confirmed their intention to.

Ahead of the summit in Singapore, North Korean officials had failed to attend a planning meeting with their U.S. counterpar­ts, causing tension between the two negotiatin­g partners.

The repatriati­on of the remains of U.S. soldiers from North Korea has been a major issue between Washington and Pyongyang since the armistice that end of the Korean War, when thousands of Americans were left in Korea either missing in action or as prisoners of war.

Hundreds of remains have been repatriate­d since 1990, but the process has been fraught with mistrust. The transfer of remains between North Korea and the United States has not taken place since 2005.

President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had pledged to recover more American remains when they met in Singapore on June 12. A statement signed by both leaders promised the “immediate repatriati­on of those already identified.”

Trump told a crowd of supporters a week later that the remains of 200 Americans “have been sent back.” Military officials later denied that, but told reporters that they expected the remains to arrive within days and had made arrangemen­ts for their arrival, such as storing caskets at the DMZ.

Since the summit in Singapore, there has been increasing scrutiny of the agreement reached by Trump and Kim, with some experts suggesting that North Korea did not really intend to give up its nuclear weapons.

Pompeo had visited Pyongyang last week in a bid to ease any misunderst­andings between the two parties and find areas where they could make progress. Though the secretary of state described the talks as “productive” after they concluded, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry later released a statement that criticized the “regrettabl­e” U.S. negotiatin­g style.

Speaking in Singapore on Thursday, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said that North Korea’s statement was a “strategy that can often be seen in negotiatio­ns.”

Moon also said that Pompeo’s visit had showed that both Pyongyang and Washington had the same view of denucleari­zation, according to his spokesman Yoon Young-chan.

 ?? JOHN SMIERCIAK/POST-TRIBUNE ?? Hundreds of U.S. soldiers’ remains were repatriate­d from the North since 1990, but the process faces mistrust.
JOHN SMIERCIAK/POST-TRIBUNE Hundreds of U.S. soldiers’ remains were repatriate­d from the North since 1990, but the process faces mistrust.

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