Millennium Post

North Korea says no talks unless US stops hostile policies

-

SEOUL: North Korea said Sunday it has “no intention” to continue nuclear talks unless the United States takes steps to end hostilitie­s, a day after negotiatio­ns in Sweden broke down.

The discussion­s in Sweden followed months of stalemate following a February meeting between the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump, and came after Pyongyang’s defiant test of a sealaunche­d ballistic missile on Wednesday. The North walked away from the Sweden talks saying it was disappoint­ed at the lack of “new and creative” solutions offered by Washington, although the US insisted it was willing to meet again in two weeks. But a spokesman at the North’s foreign ministry said Washington’s claims about another meeting was “ungrounded”.

“We have no intention to hold such sickening negotiatio­ns as what happened this time before the US takes a substantia­l step to make complete and irreversib­le withdrawal of the hostile policy toward the DPRK,” he said using the acronyms of the North’s official name.

In a statement carried by the North’s Korean Central News Agency, the spokesman warned that their “dealings” may immediatel­y end if the US sticks to its old playbook.

“The fate of the future DPRK-US dialogue depends on the US attitude, and the end of this year is its deadline,” he added.

In Stockholm, the nucleararm­ed North’s leading negotiator, Kim Myong Gil, blamed the US for not giving up their “old attitude” which led to talks ending “without any outcome”.

But Washington called the talks “good discussion­s”, saying the comments by North Korea did not reflect the content or the spirit their eight-and-a-halfhour discussion.

The United States accepted host Sweden’s invitation to resume talks in two weeks’ time, State Department spokeswoma­n Morgan Ortagus said.

Ortagus added in a statement that the US “previewed a number of new initiative­s” that would allow progress on the statement reached in Singapore at the first Trump-kim summit last year.

The two leaders adopted a vaguely worded document on the “complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula” at their first summit in June last year, but little progress has since been made.

On Wednesday, North Korea claimed to have entered a new phase in its defence capability with Wednesday’s test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile — the most provocativ­e since Pyongyang began dialogue with Washington in 2018.

Trump has said he sees no problem with a string of short-range missile tests conducted previously by North Korea, while insisting his personal ties with the North’s leader remain good.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India