USA TODAY US Edition

Kim envoy gets White House meeting

Trump expecting letter from N. Korean leader

- David Jackson

WASHINGTON – A top North Korean official will meet with President Trump on Friday to deliver a letter from Kim Jong Un about a prospectiv­e summit that looks increasing­ly likely, officials said Thursday.

A week after canceling a summit scheduled for June 12 in Singapore, Trump said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s meetings with a North Korean delegation have gone “very well” and negotiatio­ns for a reschedule­d meeting “are in good hands.”

“A letter is going to be delivered to me from Kim Jong Un,” Trump said. “I look forward to seeing what’s in the letter.”

Trump said one meeting with Kim — if it comes off — probably wouldn’t resolve all the disputes between the United States and North Korea.

“I want it to be meaningful,” Trump said. “It doesn’t mean it gets all done at one meeting. Maybe a second and third — and maybe we’ll have none.”

Pompeo’s meetings in New York City included Kim Yong Chul, the top aide who will deliver Kim Jong Un’s letter to the White House and speak with Trump.

Summit talks are “moving in the right direction,” Pompeo said, though he added that the U.S. will insist on complete and verifiable denucleari­zation of North Korea’s weapons programs — a demand Kim’s government has balked at.

Asked whether officials would formally reschedule the summit after Trump’s talk with the North Koreans on Friday, Pompeo said, “Don’t know the answer to that.” Since Trump canceled the meeting with Kim in Singapore, the parties have tried to reschedule.

One potential dispute: the definition of “denucleari­zation.” Trump and aides talked about the eliminatio­n of North Korea’s weapons programs, including ballistic missiles; the North Koreans said “denucleari­zation” would also apply to U.S. weapons systems designed to protect the region.

The North Koreans want the U.S. and its allies to lift economic sanctions that have crippled their economy.

Kim’s government said it would never give up all its nuclear weapons, calling them essential to the regime’s security, one of the claims that led to Trump’s cancellati­on last week. Kim has long accused the United States of seeking his removal from power.

“I want it to be meaningful. It doesn’t mean it gets all done at one meeting.” President Trump On North Korea denucleari­zation talks

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