The Columbus Dispatch

US shrugs at NKorea threat to skip summit

- By Zeke Miller and Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — Amid fresh uncertaint­y over his planned summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he is committed to pressing for the country to abandon its nuclear program as part of any meeting.

North Korea threatened earlier in the day to scrap the historic summit between Trump and Kim, saying it has no interest in a “one-sided” affair meant to pressure the North to abandon its nuclear weapons. But Trump appeared to shrug off the warning, saying the U.S. hadn’t been notified.

“We haven’t seen anything; we haven’t heard anything,” Trump said as he welcomed the president of Uzbekistan to the White House. “We will see what happens.”

The summit is set for June 12 in Singapore.

The warning from North Korea’s first vice foreign minister came after the country abruptly canceled a high-level meeting with South Korea to protest U.S.-South Korean military exercises that the North has long claimed are an invasion rehearsal.

Behind the scenes, White House aides tried to soothe South Korean frustratio­ns over the canceled meeting with the North as they continue to plan for the summit as if nothing had changed. U.S. officials likened the threat to Trump’s warning that he might walk away from the summit if he determines Kim is not serious about abandoning his nuclear program.

The direction from the Oval Office to White House aides and other U.S. national-security agencies Wednesday was to downplay the North Korean threats and not “take the bait” by overreacti­ng to the provocatio­n, a senior U.S. official said. The official wasn’t

authorized to discuss internal conversati­on publicly and requested anonymity.

National Security Adviser John Bolton told Fox News Radio on Wednesday that “we are trying to be both optimistic and realistic at the same time.”

Bolton, who was called out by name by the North for saying that the U.S. is seeking an outcome similar to Libya’s unilateral nuclear disarmamen­t, said the personal attack raised the question of “whether this really is a sign that that they’re not taking our objective of denucleari­zation seriously.”

North Korean’s Kim Kye Gwan said in a statement carried by state media that “we are no longer interested in a negotiatio­n that will be all about driving us into a corner and making a one-sided demand for us to give up our nukes, and this would force us to reconsider whether we would accept the North Korea-U.S. summit meeting.”

Kimi Kye Gwan was a leading negotiator of an aid-for-disarmamen­t deal that collapsed under the administra­tion of President George W. Bush when Bolton was the undersecre­tary of state for arms control and North Korea was suspected of secretly seeking to enrich uranium.

In commentari­es published through the state-run news agency, North Korea steered clear of criticizin­g Trump himself and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last week for the second time in little more than a month and brought home three American prisoners. That suggested Pyongyang still wants the summit to go ahead.

But it also took the opportunit­y to air its negotiatin­g position and take aim at Bolton, who has suggested that negotiatio­ns in 2004 that led to the shipping of nuclear components to the U.S. from Libya under Moammar Gadhafi would be a good model for North Korea as well — although Gadhafi was deposed seven years later following a NATO-led

military campaign. The North on Wednesday described that proposal as a “sinister move” to bring about its collapse.

North Korea may have also been responding to aims for the summit aired by Bolton and Pompeo in Sunday morning talk shows last weekend.

Bolton told ABC that denucleari­zation means getting rid of all the North’s nuclear weapons, dismantlin­g them and taking them to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where the U.S. developed its atomic bomb during World War II and retains a nuclear and high-technology research laboratory.

Bolton added that North Korea would have to get rid of its uranium-enrichment and plutonium reprocessi­ng facilities, reveal its weapons sites and allow open inspection­s.

Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon said he is concerned that talks are “really being oversimpli­fied” by the White House. “This is not a like condo deal where two people sit down and hash out a number of outstandin­g issues, and then they say, ‘Well, some lawyers can write it up.’”

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