The Denver Post

Mattis: Sanctions relief when it gives up nukes

- Keith Zhai

North Korea will get relief from internatio­nal sanctions only when it has shown irreversib­le moves toward denucleari­zation, Secretary of Defense James Mattis said ahead of a summit next week between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Speaking Sunday in Singapore at the start of a meeting with the defense ministers of South Korea and Japan, Mattis warned that “we can anticipate at best a bumpy road to the negotiatio­ns.”

“As defense ministers we must maintain a strong, collaborat­ive defensive stance so we enable our diplomats to negotiate from a calm position of strength in this critical time,” Mattis said. The ministers were in Singapore for the annual IISS Shangri-La Dialogue, which brings together global defense officials.

He added that all United Nations Security Council resolution­s on the regime must stay in place. “North Korea will receive relief only when it demonstrat­es verifiable and irreversib­le steps to denucleari­zation,” Mattis said.

His comments came after Trump conceded that North Korea won’t agree immediatel­y to give up its nuclear arsenal, and seemingly walked back expectatio­ns for a quick deal from his planned June 12 Singapore meeting with Kim.

Asked Friday about the vaunted “maximum pressure” campaign of sanctions enacted to rein in North Korea, Trump said, “I don’t want to use that term. Because we’re getting along.”

The U.S. has previously insisted that North Korea give up all its weapons before it can shed its pariah status or get any relief from sanctions. North Korea has bristled at the idea, and it’s unclear if the two sides will be able to bridge their difference­s enough for the meeting to be deemed a success.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in is set to join the Singapore summit with the meeting likely to declare an end to the Korean War after almost 70 years, the JoongAng Daily reported Sunday, citing a diplomatic source it didn’t identify.

Meanwhile, North Korea moved to replace its defense minister ahead of the pivotal negotiatio­ns, Japan’s Asahi newspaper reported Sunday, citing people that it didn’t identify. No Kwang Chol, the head of the ruling Workers’ Party’s second economic committee, was chosen to replace Pak Yong Sik, who served as defense chief since May 2015.

Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera told reporters after the meeting with Mattis and South Korean minister Song Young-moo that the nations agreed “it is very important for North Korea to take concrete actions in a perfect and irreversib­le way.”

“Both pressure and dialogue are important,” he said, adding “we believe that pressure will be maintained, which will help solve this problem.”

Japan has taken a cautious stance on the North Korea summit, concerned about easing pressure on a regime that only months ago was firing missiles over Japanese territory. Onodera in comments to the forum on Saturday warned against rewarding North Korea for “solely agreeing” to talks, and said Japan sought the removal of ballistic missiles of “all flight ranges” from North Korea.

The summit was resurrecte­d after Trump called it off in a letter to Kim on May 24, complainin­g of “the tremendous anger and open hostility” in comments from North Korea. But he had also left the door open, writing, “If you change your mind having to do with this most important summit, please do not hesitate to call me or write.”

Trump’s talk now of an openended process is a jarring shift from the speedy outcome that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other officials demanded when the summit was in limbo. Trump didn’t say what he hopes to get out of the summit, nor did he talk about what the U.S. was prepared to give up, aside from musing about the possibilit­y of a declaratio­n ending the Korean War for good.

 ?? Yong Teck Lim, The Associated Press ?? From left, South Korea's National Defense Minister Song Youngmoo, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Japan's Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera join hands before their trilateral meeting at the 17th Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies...
Yong Teck Lim, The Associated Press From left, South Korea's National Defense Minister Song Youngmoo, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Japan's Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera join hands before their trilateral meeting at the 17th Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies...

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