The Sunday Guardian

Trump, Kim will hold second summit in FEB

South Korea said it expected the summit to be a ‘turning point to lay firm foundation for lasting peace on the Korean peninsula.’

- DAVID BRUNNSTROM & MATT SPETALNICK WASHINGTON REUTERS

US President Donald Trump will hold a second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in late February but will maintain economic sanctions on Pyongyang, the White House said on Friday after Trump met Pyongyang’s top nuclear negotiator.

The announceme­nt came amid a diplomatic flurry in Washington surroundin­g the visit of Kim Yong Chol, a hardline former spy chief, and marked a sign of movement in a denucleari­sation effort that has stalled since a landmark meeting between Trump and the North Korean leader in Singapore on 12 June. “President Donald J. Trump met with Kim Yong Chol for an hour and a half to discuss denucleari­sation and a second summit, which will take place near the end of February,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said. She said a location would be announced later. The summit was announced even though there has been no indication of any narrowing of difference­s over US demands that North Korea abandon a nuclear weapons programme that threatens the United States and Pyongyang’s demands for a lifting of punishing sanctions.

Sanders said that Trump’s talks with the North Korean envoy were productive but added that the United States “is going to continue to keep pressure and sanctions on North Korea.”

South Korea’s presidenti­al office said it expected the upcoming summit to be a “turning point to lay the firm foundation for lasting peace on the Korean peninsula.”

South Korea will work with the United States and other countries to “achieve concrete and practical results towards complete denucleari­sation and a lasting peace regime through the North Korea-us summit...,” presidenti­al spokesman Kim Eui-kyeom said in a statement on Saturday.

South Korea will also expand inter-korean dialogue to help a successful meeting between Trump and Kim, he added. The first summit produced a vague commitment by Kim Jong Un to work towards the denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula, but he has yet to take what Washington sees as concrete steps in that direction. Neverthele­ss, both he and Trump had expressed an interest in arranging a second meeting, something some Us-based analysts see as premature.

Critics of US efforts say the first summit only boosted Kim’s internatio­nal stature without much to show for it, and some believe Trump may see a second meeting as a way of distractin­g from his domestic troubles.

Trump declared just after the Singapore meeting that the nuclear threat posed by North Korea was over. But hours before Kim Yong Chol’s arrival on Thursday, the US president unveiled a revamped US missile defence strategy that singled out the country as an ongoing and “extraordin­ary threat.” Harry Kazianis, an analyst at the conservati­ve Washington-based Center for the National Interest, called the agreement to hold another summit positive. But he added: “Both nations must now show at least some tangible benefits from their diplomatic efforts during a second summit, or risk their efforts being panned as nothing more than reality TV.”

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said on Saturday he had “an incredible” meeting with North Korea’s nuclear envoy Kim Yong Chol and the two sides had made “a lot of progress.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? People take part in a protest against a proposed new labour law, billed as the “slave law”, on the Chain Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday.
REUTERS People take part in a protest against a proposed new labour law, billed as the “slave law”, on the Chain Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday.

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