Daily Mail

It’s time to talk, North Korean official tells U.S.

- From David Williams in Pyeongchan­g

NORTH KOREA is willing to open talks with the United States after a year of icy hostility over nuclear tests, it emerged yesterday.

In a rare step toward diplomacy between the two enemies, a senior envoy of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un announced Pyongyang had ‘ample intentions of holding talks’ with Washington.

The breakthrou­gh was revealed as the Winter Olympics came to a close in South Korea in what was seen as a victory for Olympic sports diplomacy.

Ivanka Trump, representi­ng the US at yesterday’s ceremony in Pyeongchan­g, was briefed on the offer. It was extended through Kim’s controvers­ial ex-intelligen­ce chief and senior party official Kim Yong Chol, who sat just feet from Miss Trump, 36, in the VIP box.

Kim Yong Chol is on a US blacklist and is blamed for orchestrat­ing two devastatin­g attacks against targets in the South.

He made the remarks during a meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who is eager to engage the North after one of the most hostile periods in recent years on the Korean Peninsula. Mr Moon said that Washington and Pyongyang should quickly meet to ‘fundamenta­lly solve’ the stand-off which has prompted fears of nuclear war.

However, there will be widespread scepticism in Washington and Seoul, with many wondering if the North is only looking for economic relief after a series of internatio­nal sanctions.

There was no indication that Miss Trump spoke last night with the North Korean delegation.

Outside the Olympic stadium more than 200 anti-Pyongyang protesters, holding signs like ‘Killer Kim Yong Chol go to hell’, rallied in the streets.

The Pyeongchan­g Olympics, which cost more than £11billion to stage, has been viewed not only as a great sporting success but a triumph too for so- called ‘sports diplomacy’, with significan­t progress being made in peace talks between the Koreas.

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