The Korea Times

‘President Trump impeachmen­t saga may impact NK-US talks’

- By Lee Min-hyung mhlee@koreatimes.co.kr

With U.S. President Donald Trump facing an impeachmen­t investigat­ion, all eyes are on whether this political conundrum will have a negative impact on reviving the nuclear disarmamen­t dialogue between Washington and Pyongyang.

Earlier this week, U.S. House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the start of an “official impeachmen­t inquiry” into Trump amid a growing scandal concerning a phone call in which he pressured his Ukrainian counterpar­t, Volodymyr Zelensky, to investigat­e his possible presidenti­al rival Joe Biden

As of now, chances look slim that Trump will be actually impeached, but there are lingering concerns that he may now place a lower priority on the denucleari­zation talks to handle the controvers­y.

The political turmoil surroundin­g Trump comes at a critical juncture when Washington and Pyongyang are fine-tuning the details to resume their working-level talks ahead of another possible summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

The U.S. leader has taken political advantage of his summits with Kim as a major diplomatic achievemen­t, claiming he stopped the North from carrying out threatenin­g military provocatio­ns by forming a close and personal relationsh­ip with him through their meetings.

Experts said Thursday it was too early to link the controvers­y with the planned resumption of the disarmamen­t talks.

“Trump does not have to play a direct and critical role in the upcoming resumption of their nuclear talks in considerat­ion of their working-level nature,” said Shin Beomchul, a senior analyst at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies.

The two parties still need time to discuss details, such as a timeline and location, for a future summit between Trump and Kim, so the U.S. domestic political issue will not have any negative impact on the progress of the nuclear dialogue, according to Shin.

“On top of that, North Korea has little to do with the reasons behind the impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump,” he said. “If Washington and Pyongyang had been at the stage of fine-tuning their difference­s for a potential summit, the issue would have had a bad influence. But this is not the case at the moment.”

The U.S. and the North are widely expected to restart their suspended denucleari­zation talks in the next few weeks. Such expectatio­ns come amid a series of signals from the North, which expressed its willingnes­s to resume negotiatio­ns.

Park Won-gon, a professor at Handong Global University, also concurred that the Trump impeachmen­t issue will have a limited impact on the talks.

“But one thing that is clear is that Trump will consider all the ramificati­ons before signing a deal with the North,” Park said.

In the upcoming negotiatio­ns with the North, Trump will make politicall­y based decisions ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al reelection, according to the professor.

The South Korean government is also paying close attention to the talks, as their outcome will determine the future of inter-Korean relations. These have soured in recent months in the wake of the failure of the Hanoi summit between Trump and Kim in February.

On Thursday, a Seoul-based local newspaper reported that a working-level delegation from the U.S. visited Pyongyang last weekend for talks with their North Korean counterpar­ts. Citing an unnamed source, the report also said U.S. Special Representa­tive for North Korea Stephen Biegun held talks with Kim Myong-gil, who heads the North’s working-level nuclear delegation.

But the Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied the report, saying it was far from the truth.

“The U.S. has not informed the South of such an unofficial meeting between Biegun and the North Korean officials in the latter’s capital,” an official from the ministry explained.

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