Trump touts US-NKorea talks; officials say Pompeo met Kim
PALM BEACH, Fla. -- President Donald Trump said Tuesday that the U.S. and North Korea have been holding direct talks at “extremely high levels” — and U.S. officials told The Associated Press that CIA Director Mike Pompeo was involved.
The officials said Pompeo recently traveled to North Korea to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in preparation for a potential summit between Trump and Kim.
Trump appeared to suggest that he and Kim had been in direct contact when asked about the discussions at his private Mar-a-Lago club, where he is hosting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. But White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Trump and Kim have not spoken.
“Let’s leave it a little bit short of that,” Trump said later, adding, “We have had talks at the highest level.”
The officials spoke anonymously about Pompeo’s trip because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly.
Trump also confirmed that North and South Korea are working to negotiate an end to hostilities before next week’s meeting between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in. The meeting will be the third inter-Korean summit since the Koreas’ 1945 division.
“They do have my blessing to discuss the end of the war,” said Trump, who welcomed Abe to his Florida resort on Tuesday.
Trump is looking to hold his own summit with Kim in the next two months and said five locations are under consideration. The president would not disclose the sites, but said the U.S. was not among them.
The proposed summit follows months of increasingly heated rhetoric over the North’s nuclear weapons program.
“We have had direct talks at very high levels — extremely high levels — with North Korea,” Trump said.
“We’ll either have a very good meeting or we won’t have a good meeting,” he added. “And maybe we won’t even have a meeting at all, depending on what’s going in. But I think that there’s a great chance to solve a world problem.”
The president did not answer shouted questions about whether he has spoken with Kim.
Kim’s offer for a summit was initially conveyed to Trump by South Korea last month, and the president shocked many when it was announced that he had accepted. U.S. officials have indicated over the past two weeks that North Korea’s government has communicated directly with Washington that it is ready to discuss its nuclear weapons program.
Abe, who has voiced fears that shortand medium-range missiles that pose a threat to Japan might not be part of the U.S. negotiations, praised Trump on Tuesday for his bravery in agreeing to meet with the North Korean dictator.
“I’d like to commend Donald’s courage in his decision to have the upcoming summit meeting with the North Korean leader,” Abe said.
Trump took credit for the inter-Korean talks, saying, “Without us and without me, in particular, I guess you would have to say, they wouldn’t be discussing anything.”