The Southland Times

Putin to act as Kim’s go-between with US

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Vladimir Putin said Kim Jong Un has asked him to serve as an intermedia­ry with the US after the North Korean leader’s nuclear disarmamen­t talks with Donald Trump collapsed.

The Russian and North Korean leaders met for the first time in Vladivosto­k yesterday, allowing Moscow to reinsert itself into the dialogue around denucleari­sation.

Putin will next head to China, where he will discuss the issue with Xi Jinping, its president. ‘‘Chairman Kim asked us to inform the American side of his position on questions that have arisen amid the processes taking place on the Korean peninsula,’’ said Putin. ‘‘So there are no secrets here. We will discuss this with our American and Chinese friends.’’

Last week, Pyongyang demanded Trump replace the ‘‘reckless’’ Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state, as his lead negotiator and claimed it had tested a new ‘‘tactical guided weapon with a powerful warhead’’.

‘‘It is my and my government’s firm strategic position that the strategic and traditiona­l friendly relations between North Korea and Russia be strengthen­ed,’’ Kim said at the talks.

He did not join the press conference afterwards.

Russia was in favour of Pyongyang’s ‘‘full denucleari­sation’’, Putin said, and he suggested that Washington’s overreachi­ng demands and supposedly threatenin­g posture hindered this. In a clear shot at the US, he said he and Kim had discussed the need to ‘‘return to a situation when internatio­nal law, not the law of the fist, decides the order of things in the world’’.

‘‘North Korea needs a guarantee of its security, of the preservati­on of its sovereignt­y,’’ he said. ‘‘What guarantees could there be besides those made under internatio­nal law?’’ He also said he welcomed Kim’s efforts to ‘‘normalise North KoreanUS relations’’.

Russia and China drafted a road map in 2017 calling for a step-by-step approach to rolling back North Korea’s nuclear programme, while Trump has sought a sweeping disarmamen­t in exchange for sanctions relief.

A Vietnam summit in February broke down when Trump reportedly rejected Kim’s offer of partial disarmamen­t in exchange for reduced sanctions.

Yesterday’s talks were a chance for Kim to reduce Washington’s leverage in negotiatio­ns by showing he has other internatio­nal partners, while Putin can position Russia as a major player in the Asian region.

North Korean denucleari­sation is one of the few areas where the US has continued dialogue with Russia, sending an envoy to Moscow to discuss the issue earlier this month.

While Putin said the two sides discussed sanctions during more than twoand-a-half hours of talks, he did not provide further details.

It was thought Kim could seek humanitari­an food aid and sanctions relief from Russia, which voted for the punitive measures in the United Nations but has been accused of helping Pyongyang dodge restrictio­ns on fuel imports.

– Telegraph Group

 ?? AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un take an escalator heading down after the talks in Vladivosto­k, Russia.
AP Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un take an escalator heading down after the talks in Vladivosto­k, Russia.

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