The Denver Post

High-ranking N. Korean diplomat to travel to U.S.

- By Matthew Lee and Josh Lederman

NEW YORK» A top aide to Kim Jong Un will make a rare visit to Washington Friday to hand a letter from the North Korean leader to President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said after reporting “good progress” in talks between the two sides to revive an on-again, off-again nuclear summit.

“I am confident we are moving in the right direction,” Pompeo told reporters at a news conference in New York after meeting Thursday with former North Korean military intelligen­ce chief Kim Yong Chol. “Our two countries face a pivotal moment in our relationsh­ip, and it would be nothing short of tragic to let this opportunit­y go to waste.”

He would not say that the summit is a definite go for Singapore on June 12 and could not say if that decision would be made after Trump reads Kim Jong Un’s letter. However, his comments were the most positive from any U.S. official since Trump abruptly canceled the meeting last week after belligeren­t statements from the North.

The two countries, eying the first summit between the U.S. and the North after six decades of hostility, have also been holding negotiatio­ns in Singapore and the demilitari­zed zone between the two Koreas.

Early Thursday, Trump told reporters “we are doing very well” with North Korea. He added there may even need to be a second or third summit meeting to reach a deal on North Korean denucleari­zation but still hedged, saying “maybe we’ll have none.”

Kim Yong Chol is the highest-ranking North Korean official to visit the U.S. in 18 years, and his trip to the White House will be a highly symbolic sign of easing tensions after fears of war escalated amid North Korean nuclear and missile tests last year.

Pompeo, the former CIA chief who has traveled to North Korea and met with Kim Jong Un twice in the past two months, said he believed the country’s leaders are “contemplat­ing a path forward where they can make a strategic shift, one that their country has not been prepared to make before.”

He tweeted from New York: “Good progress today during our meetings” with Kim and his team. Yet he also said at his news conference that difficult work remains including hurdles that may appear to be insurmount­able as negotiatio­ns progress on the U.S. demand for North Korea’s complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation.

“We will push forward to test the propositio­n that we can achieve that outcome,” he said.

Pompeo spoke after meeting with Kim Yong Chol for a little more than two hours at the residence of the deputy U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. The talks had been expected to be held in two sessions, one in the morning and one in the early afternoon, and had not been expected to conclude until 1:30 p.m. Instead, the two men wrapped up at 11:25 a.m.

Pompeo said they finished everything they needed to address in the morning session. Immediatel­y afterward, he tweeted that he had had substantiv­e talks on the priorities for the potential summit. Pompeo was accompanie­d by Andrew Kim, the head of a CIA unit assigned to work on North Korea, and Mark Lambert, the head of the State Department’s Korea desk.

“Our secretary of state is having very good meetings,” Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews before departing on a trip to Texas. He said of the North Koreans, “I believe they will be coming down to Washington on Friday. A letter being delivered to me from Kim Jong Un. It is very important to them.”

“It is all a process,” he said of arranging the summit. “Hopefully we will have a meeting on the 12th.”

Despite the upbeat messaging in the United States, Kim Jong Un, in a meeting with Russia’s foreign minister Thursday, complained about the U.S. trying to spread its influence in the region, a comment that may complicate the summit plans. “As we move to adjust to the political situation in the face of U.S. hegemonism, I am willing to exchange detailed and indepth opinions with your leadership and hope to do so moving forward,” Kim told Sergey Lavrov.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States