The Oklahoman

Pentagon: NKorea slow to negotiate over US war remains

- BY ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON — Months after the White House raised hopes for bringing home thousands of U.S. battlefiel­d remains from North Korea, the returns have stalled. Detailed negotiatio­ns on future recovery arrangemen­ts have not even begun.

The slower pace appears linked to the more talkedabou­t stalemate over North Korea’s nuclear weapons .

At a June meeting with President Donald Trump, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un committed to “work toward” the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula and to cooperate in recovering U.S. war remains.

Neither issue is said to be explicitly dependent on the other, and in August, the North turned over 55 boxes of remains, with expectatio­ns of more to come soon. But progress then slowed, as has the nuclear diplomacy.

Trump has said he likely will have a second summit with Kim in January or February, and while the nuclear issue would be the central focus, some believe a second meeting is the best chance to restore momentum to the remains recovery effort.

“It is easy to wonder if that isn’t what everyone is waiting on to happen,” said Richard Downes, executive director of the Coalition of Families of Korean War and Cold War POW/MIAs, which advocates for a full accounting of the missing.

The remains of thousands of U.S. service members were left behind in North Korea when the war ended in 1953, with the North and South separated by a demilitari­zed zone and no formal end to the conflict. Joint U.S. North Korean recovery operations started in 1996 and were halted in 2005 amid rising worries about the North’s nuclear ambitions.

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