Trump praises North Korea’s Kim for progress in nuclear talks
US President Donald Trump praised North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un for agreeing to further steps toward giving up his nuclear weapons, signaling that stalled negotiations might get back on track despite the lack of concrete details.
In a late-night tweet, Trump described Kim’s moves to discuss allowing nuclear inspectors, in addition to dismantling a missile test site and putting in a joint bid to host the 2032 Summer Olympics with South Korea, as “Very exciting!” Last month, Trump cancelled a visit to Pyongyang by Secretary of State Michael Pompeo due to a lack of progress after his landmark summit with Kim in June.
During a second day of meetings between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, North Korea on Wednesday agreed to dismantle its main Yongbyon nuclear production site if the US takes reciprocal actions. It also said it would dismantle a key missile test site under the watch of international inspectors and take other steps toward denuclearisation.
“We agreed to make active efforts to turn the Korean peninsula into the land of peace without nuclear weapons or nuclear threats,” Kim said at a joint briefing with Moon in Pyongyang.
Moon, who invited Kim to visit Seoul later this year, added: “Chairman Kim has clearly shown a way to denuclearise the Korean peninsula today (Wednesday). We have agreed on a Korean Peninsula without nuclear weapons, without nuclear threats and without a war.”
Even as the summit appeared to open the door for renewed US-North Korea talks, little progress was evident on the major issues dividing the two sides. Kim is pushing for a peace declaration with the US before he takes concrete steps toward getting rid of his nuclear capability, while the Trump administration wants a detailed inventory of his weapons and inspections.
It’s still unclear if North Korea will unveil nuclear production facilities other than Yongbyon, and disclose the location of its mobile launchers that can fire intercontinental ballistic missiles.
“There are a number of positive steps that increase trust in Korea,” said Melissa Hanham, a senior research associate at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, California. “With regards to denuclearisation, I don’t think there’s been much change.”
“We agreed to make active efforts to turn the Korean peninsula into the land of peace without nuclear weapons or nuclear threats” KIM JONG-UN North Korean leader