The Timaru Herald

Trump says attitude will rule at summit

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its nuclear and programmes.

‘‘I don’t think I have to prepare very much,’’ Trump said. ‘‘It’s about attitude. It’s about willingnes­s to get things done.’’

Declaring the summit to be ‘‘much more than a photo-op,’’ he predicted ‘‘a terrific success or a modified success’’ when he meets with Kim next week in Singapore. He said the talks would start a process to bring about a resolution to the nuclear issue.

‘‘I think it’s not a one-meeting deal,’’ he said. Asked how many days he’s willing to stay to talk with Kim, Trump said, ‘‘One, two three, depending on what happens.’’

Still he predicted he’ll know very quickly whether Kim is serious about dealing with US demands.

‘‘They have to de-nuke,’’ Trump said. ‘‘If they don’t denucleari­se, that will not be acceptable. And we cannot take sanctions off.’’

Trump, who coined the term ‘‘maximum pressure’’ to describe US sanctions against the North, said they would be an indicator for the success or failure of the talks. ballistic missile

‘‘We don’t use the term anymore because we’re going into a friendly negotiatio­n,’’ Trump said.

‘‘Perhaps after that negotiatio­n, I will be using it again. You’ll know how well we do in the negotiatio­n. If you hear me saying, ‘We’re going to use maximum pressure,’ you’ll know the negotiatio­n did not do well, frankly.’’

At another point, he said it was ‘‘absolutely’’ possible he and Kim could sign a declaratio­n to end the Korean War.

The 1950-53 conflict ended with an armistice but not a formal peace treaty.

Trump spent yesterday firing off a dozen unrelated tweets – on the Russia investigat­ion and other subjects – before meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to talk about summit preparatio­ns and strategy.

‘‘I think I’ve been prepared for this summit for a long time, as has the other side,’’ he said.

‘‘II think they’ve been preparing for a long time also. So this isn’t a question of preparatio­n, it’s a question of whether or not people want it to happen.’’

Administra­tion officials indicated that Trump actually was putting in preparatio­n time. National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis noted the president met Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton in the afternoon ‘‘to continue their strategic discussion­s’’ ahead of the summit.

Pompeo said he was confident the president would be fully prepared and dismissed reports of division inside Trump’s foreign policy team over the decision to embrace the meeting with Kim.

In his previous role as CIA director, Pompeo told reporters yesterday, ‘‘there were few days that I left the Oval Office, after having briefed the president, that we didn’t talk about North Korea.’’

Pompeo said Kim had ‘‘personally’’ given him assurances that he was willing to pursue denucleari­sation and said US and North Korean negotiatin­g teams had made unspecifie­d progress towards bridging the gap over defining that term as part of a potential agreement.

He would not say whether Trump would insist that the North put an end to its chemical, biological and ballistic missile programs.

Pompeo said Trump’s approach is ‘‘fundamenta­lly different’’ from prior administra­tions.

‘‘In the past, there’d been months and months of detailed negotiatio­ns and they got nowhere,’’ he said.

‘‘This has already driven us to a place we’d not been able to achieve.’’

Since taking office, Trump has repeatedly accused his predecesso­rs of failing to address the nuclear threat from a nation that launched its atomic programme in the 1960s and began producing bomb fuel in the early 1990s.

Past administra­tions have also used a combinatio­n of sanctions and diplomacy to seek denucleari­sation, but the results failed to endure.

Christophe­r Hill, the lead US negotiator with North Korea during the George W. Bush administra­tion, said a summit with the North had long been available to US leaders.

‘‘The fact was no US president wanted to do this, and for good reason,’’ he said.

‘‘It’s a big coup for (the North Koreans), so the question is whether we can make them pay for it.’’

Before he sits down with Kim, Trump must first face wary US allies who question his commitment to their own security and resent his quarrellin­g with them on sensitive trade matters.

Trump will be in Canada for a Group of Seven summit of leading industrial nations this weekend. – AP

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump welcomes Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the White House in Washington yesterday.
President Donald Trump welcomes Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the White House in Washington yesterday.

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