Cape Breton Post

North Korea warns U.S. not to take signals ‘wrong way’

- JOSH SMITH

SEOUL — A top North Korean official warned the United States on Tuesday not to misinterpr­et comments by her leader, saying doing so would end in disappoint­ment, as a U.S. envoy aiming to get talks with the North back on track met South Korea’s president.

Kim Yo Jong, a senior official in North Korea’s ruling party and sister of leader Kim Jong Un, released a statement in state media saying the United States appeared to be interpreti­ng signals from North Korea in the “wrong way.”

She was responding to U.S. National Security adviser Jake Sullivan, who on Sunday said he saw as an “interestin­g signal” in a recent speech by Kim Jong Un on preparing for both confrontat­ion and diplomacy with the United States.

“It seems that the U.S. may interpret the situation in such a way as to seek a comfort for itself,” she said in the statement, carried by the North’s KCNA state news agency.

“The expectatio­n, which they chose to harbour the wrong way, would plunge them into a greater disappoint­ment.”

North Korea’s nuclear weapons program has been a seemingly intractabl­e problem for the United States for years.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has conducted a review of North Korea policy that concluded the United States would seek to find “calibrated and practical” ways of inducing it to give up its nuclear weapons.

Kim’s warning to the United States came as the recently appointed U.S. special representa­tive for North Korea, Sung Kim, was visiting South Korea to meet senior officials, including President Moon Jae-in.

Moon told the U.S. envoy he would do his best to get inter-Korean and U.S.-North Korea relations back on track during the remainder of his term in office and expressed hopes for progress toward denucleari­zation and peace on the Korean peninsula, presidenti­al spokeswoma­n Park Kyung-mee said.

Sung Kim reaffirmed Biden’s support for meaningful inter-Korean dialogue and engagement and said he would “do his best for resumption of U.S.-North Korea talks,” Park said.

On Monday, Sung Kim said he was willing to meet the North Koreans “anywhere, anytime without preconditi­ons” and that he looks forward to a “positive response soon.”

In a sign being seen in South Korea as a positive U.S. gesture, the two allies also discussed scrapping a joint “working group” analysts say South Korea has seen as an irritant in their relations.

Sung Kim, in talks with his South Korean counterpar­t, Noh Kyu-duk, agreed to “look into terminatin­g the working group,” while reinforcin­g coordinati­on at other levels, the South Korean Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The working group was set up in 2018 to help the allies coordinate approaches to North Korea on issues such as denucleari­zation talks, humanitari­an aid, sanctions enforcemen­t and inter-Korean relations amid a flurry of diplomatic engagement with the North at that time.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Noh Kyu-duk, right, South Korea’s Special Representa­tive for Korean Peninsula Peace and Security Affairs, talks with Sung Kim, left, U.S. Special Representa­tive for North Korea, during their bilateral meeting at a hotel in Seoul, South Korea, on Monday.
REUTERS Noh Kyu-duk, right, South Korea’s Special Representa­tive for Korean Peninsula Peace and Security Affairs, talks with Sung Kim, left, U.S. Special Representa­tive for North Korea, during their bilateral meeting at a hotel in Seoul, South Korea, on Monday.

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