The Oklahoman

Freed detainees head home from N Korea for big welcome

- BY MATTHEW LEE AND ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — Freed after more than a year in prison, three Americans flew homeward from North Korea late Tuesday toward a big middleof-the-night celebratio­n featuring President Donald Trump — the latest sign of improving relations between longtime adversarie­s in the buildup to a historic summit between Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

Trump promised “quite a scene” at Joint Base Andrews outside Washington for the detainees, who were released as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited North Korea on Wednesday to finalize plans for the summit.

Singapore was the likely site, late this month or in early June, for Trump’s most ambitious foreign policy effort yet.

Trump made a point of publicly thanking North Korea’s leader for the prisoners’ release — “I appreciate Kim Jong Un doing this” — and hailed it as a sign of cooling tensions and growing opportunit­y on the Korean peninsula.

North Korea had accused Kim Dong Chul, Kim Hak Song and Tony Kim, all Korean-Americans, of anti-state activities. Their arrests were widely seen as politicall­y motivated and had compounded the dire state of relations over the isolated nation’s nuclear weapons.

Trump entered office as an emboldened North Korea developed new generation­s of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles capable of hitting the continenta­l U.S. Those advances were the subject of President Barack Obama’s starkest warning shortly before Trump took office, and this is a crisis he’s convinced his negotiatin­g skills can resolve.

Trump has pointed to Kim’s willingnes­s to come to the negotiatin­g table as validating U.S. moves to tighten sanctions — branded “maximum pressure” by the president. The wee-hours ceremony Thursday was to be an early celebratio­n for an issue that has already put the prospect of a Nobel Peace Prize on Trump’s mind.

“Everyone thinks so, but I would never say it,” he said Wednesday when asked if the award was deserved.

The release capped a dramatic day of diplomacy in Pyongyang. After Pompeo’s 90-minute meeting with Kim Jong Un, he gave reporters a fingerscro­ssed sign when asked about the prisoners as he returned to his hotel. It was only after a North Korean emissary arrived a bit later to inform him that the release was confirmed.

Who are the hostages?

The three had been held for periods ranging from one and two years. They were the latest in a series of Americans who have been detained by North Korea in recent years for seemingly small offenses and typically freed when senior U.S. officials or statesmen personally visited to bail them out.

The last American to be released before this, college student Otto Warmbier, died in June 2017, days after he was repatriate­d to the U.S. with severe brain damage.

Warmbier was arrested by North Korean authoritie­s in January 2016, accused of stealing a propaganda poster and sentenced to 15 years in prison with hard labor. His parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, have filed a wrongful death lawsuit, accusing the government of torturing and killing their son.

“We are happy for the hostages and their families,” the Warmbiers said in a statement Wednesday. “We miss Otto.”

Of the newly released detainees, Kim Dong Chul, a South Koreanborn U.S. citizen, had been held the longest. The former Virginia resident was sentenced in April 2016 to 10 years in prison with hard labor after being convicted of espionage. He reportedly ran a trade and hotel service company in Rason, a special economic zone on North Korea’s border with Russia.

The other two detainees hadn’t been tried.

Kim Hak Song worked in agricultur­al developmen­t at an experiment­al farm run by the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, or PUST. The university is the only privately funded college in North Korea and was founded in 2010 with donations from Christian groups. He was detained last May for alleged antistate activities.

Tony Kim, who also uses the name Kim Sangduk, was detained in April 2017 at the Pyongyang airport. He taught accounting at PUST. He was accused of committing unspecifie­d criminal acts intended to overthrow the government.

The family of Tony Kim thanked all those who worked for his return and also credited Trump for engaging directly with North Korea. “Mostly we thank God for Tony’s safe return,” the family said in a statement.

On Capitol Hill, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer celebrated the detainees’ return but warned that “we’ll see many more hostages” if the administra­tion provides an incentive for imprisonin­g Americans.

“We are happy they’ve returned, but North Korea shouldn’t gain by taking Americans and then releasing them,” he said.

About Pompeo’s trip

During his visit, Pompeo discussed the agenda for a potential TrumpKim Jong Un summit in a meeting with Kim Yong Chol, vice chairman of the central committee of North Korea’s ruling party. Pompeo said the summit is scheduled to last one day but could be extended by a day depending on how talks progress.

Kim Yong Chol pushed back against the idea that U.S. pressure led to the likely summit.

He noted improved relations between North and South Korea, which began warming as the North sent athletes and even fielded a combined hockey team during the Winter Olympics in the South.

“This is not a result of sanctions that have been imposed from outside,” he said, contradict­ing Trump.

Pompeo’s trip, his second to North Korea this year, had not been publicly disclosed when he flew out of Washington late Monday aboard an Air Force jetliner. Trump announced the mission Tuesday afternoon as he laid out his case for withdrawin­g from a landmark nuclear deal with Iran, another bitter U.S. adversary.

Accompanyi­ng Pompeo were a few senior aides, a security detail and two journalist­s — one from The Associated Press and one from The Washington Post.

Pompeo, who first traveled to North Korea as CIA chief in early April, was only the second sitting secretary of state to visit the nation with which the U.S. is still technicall­y at war. The first was Madeleine Albright, who went in 2000 as part of an unsuccessf­ul bid to arrange a meeting between then-President Bill Clinton and Kim Jong Un’s father, Kim Jong Il.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo bids farewell to senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chul, director of the United Front Department, which is responsibl­e for North-South Korea affairs, right, and Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong, left, on his departure from...
[AP PHOTO] Secretary of State Mike Pompeo bids farewell to senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chul, director of the United Front Department, which is responsibl­e for North-South Korea affairs, right, and Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong, left, on his departure from...

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