Business Standard

Pompeo’s trip to North Korea cancelled due to ‘poor progress’

- BILL FARIES, MARGARET TALEV & JENNIFER JACOBS

Trump’s surprise about-face on his top diplomat’s trip to North Korea — just a day after it was announced — reinforced a sense of drift in the administra­tion’s strategy since the president proclaimed a June summit with Kim Jong Un an historic success.

The tweets canceling a visit to Pyongyang by Secretary of State Michael Pompeo cited a lack of “sufficient progress” in denucleari­sation talks, two months after he proclaimed on Twitter that “there is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea.”

The decision “reflects poor coordinati­on on the administra­tion’s North Korea policy,” Bruce Klingner, a former Central Intelligen­ce Agency analyst and now an Asia expert at the Heritage Foundation, said in a tweet. “The diplomatic road ahead is much longer and bumpier than originally depicted by President Trump.”

In the weeks since the Trump-Kim summit in Singapore, the administra­tion has struggled to show any signs of progress in its efforts to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, which surprised intelligen­ce analysts last year with its rapid developmen­t. Pompeo conceded before the Senate recently that Kim’s regime continues producing fissile material and has provided no inventory of its nuclear program and facilities.

In addition, Pompeo was spending more of his time shoring up support for the tough internatio­nal sanctions imposed on Pyongyang last year. And on his last two meetings with North Korean officials, including a “polite” exchange with Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho in Singapore this month, Pompeo’s proclamati­ons of progress were undercut by Kim’s aides and state-run media, who have assailed U.S. strategy as “cancerous” and “gangster-like.”

Trump’s decision came after he discussed North Korea at a meeting Friday that included Pompeo, Vice President Mike Pence, Chief of Staff John Kelly, and the new envoy to North Korean talks, Steve Biegun, said two administra­tion officials familiar with the talks.

The appointmen­t of Biegun, a Ford Motor Co official who once worked at the National Security Council, came on Thursday with news that he and Pompeo would travel to Pyongyang to resume talks as early as this weekend.

South Korea Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha told Pompeo in a phone call that any delay to his visit was “regrettabl­e,” according to a ministry statement released Saturday in Seoul.

‘The diplomatic road ahead is much longer and bumpier than originally depicted by Trump’

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