Daily Dispatch

Sanctions not off the table just yet

Kim ‘must act quickly’ on nukes

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KIM Jong Un understand­s that denucleari­sation must happen “quickly”, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said yesterday, warning there will be no sanctions relief for Pyongyang until the process is finished.

Washington remained committed to the “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le” denucleari­sation of North Korea, Pompeo added, after the historic US-North Korea summit in Singapore drew criticism for its vague wording on plans for Pyongyang to give up its nuclear weapons.

“We believe that Kim Jong Un understand­s the urgency . . . that we must do this quickly,” he said of the effort to have North Korea abandon its atomic arsenal.

Washington’s top diplomat was in Seoul to brief his South Korean and Japanese counterpar­ts after President Donald Trump’s postsummit comments sparked confusion and concern in Tokyo and Seoul.

But Pompeo insisted at a joint press conference with the two countries’ foreign ministers that there was no daylight among the allies on how to achieve the denucleari­sation of North Korea.

Contrastin­g the Trump policy with previous US administra­tions, Pompeo said: “In the past, they were providing economic and financial relief before . . . complete denucleari­sation had taken place”.

“That is not going to happen, President Trump made that clear.” Pompeo’s comments came after North Korean state media reported Wednesday that Trump had not only offered to stop military exercises during dialogue, but also lift sanctions imposed on Pyongyang.

Trump said after his meeting with Kim – the first between sitting US and North Korean leaders – that Washington would halt its joint military exercises with South Korea, an announceme­nt that caught Seoul – and apparently the Pentagon – by surprise.

South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha appeared to sidestep the issue at the joint press conference, saying the matter would be left to military authoritie­s to discuss, and that the USSouth Korea alliance remained “as robust as ever”.

Earlier, South Korean President Moon Jae-in acknowledg­ed that “there may be very conflictin­g views” about the summit, but it had still helped mitigate fears of a nuclear war.

“In this way I believe it was very successful.”

He later said Seoul would carefully consider the future of the drills “if North Korea faithfully implements denucleari­sation measures and sincere dialogue continues”, according to his office.

While it is not directly involved, Japan also considers the exercises vital.

The “deterrence based on them [plays] an essential role for security in northeast Asia”, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono said after the “frank” trilateral talks yesterday.

Kono said Japan understood the pause in the drills to be contingent on North Korean steps towards denucleari­sation, adding that “no security guarantees have been given yet”.

Pompeo said the suspension of the exercises depended on productive negotiatio­ns in “good faith”.

Trump had raised eyebrows on Tuesday by describing his own country’s drills on the Korean peninsula as “provocativ­e”, a term used by the North for the exercises. Pyongyang describes its nuclear weapons and long-range missiles as a shield against US aggression, and has in the past linked denucleari­sation to the removal of US forces from the peninsula.

Pompeo later left Seoul for China, arriving late afternoon local time in Beijing where he is scheduled to meet President Xi Jinping and Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

Despite some concerns among allies and analysts, the Trump administra­tion continues to tout the summit as a success, and Pompeo said earlier that he hopes to see “major disarmamen­t” of North Korea by 2020.

A bullish Trump declared the nuclear threat from North Korea no longer exists, and tweeted Wednesday that people “can now feel much safer than the day I took office” and can “sleep well tonight!”

The US leader also defended his decision on the military drills with South Korea: “We save a fortune by not doing war games, as long as we are negotiatin­g in good faith – which both sides are!”

The president’s latest comments are in stark contrast to his threats to unleash “fire and fury” last year in response to Pyongyang’s nuclear and long-range missile tests. —

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? FACING FACTS: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, far right, addresses media with South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha and Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono after historic talks between Korea’s Kim Jong-Un and US President Donald Trump this week
Picture: GETTY IMAGES FACING FACTS: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, far right, addresses media with South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha and Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono after historic talks between Korea’s Kim Jong-Un and US President Donald Trump this week

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