The Scotsman

North Korea not living up to nuclear missile pledge, says Pompeo

- By MATTHEW LEE

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has warned North Korea is far from living up to its pledge to denucleari­se and remains in violation of numerous UN Security Council resolution­s.

Speaking in Singapore yesterday, before he attended an Asian security forum with North Korea’s foreign minister, Mr Pompeo said there was “still a ways to go” before achieving the goal of ridding the North of its nuclear weapons.

Mr Pompeo’s comments came after the White House announced president Donald Trump had received a new letter from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and responded quickly with a letter of his own.

The correspond­ence, following up on their Singapore summit in June, came amid fresh concerns over Pyongyang’s commitment to denucleari­sation despite the rosy picture of progress painted by Mr Trump. Mr Pompeo has taken the lead in negotiatio­ns with the North, having travelled to Pyongyang three times since April and accompanie­d Mr Trump to the summit.

He will be in the same room today as his North Korean counterpar­t at the Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations annual regional forum.

A separate meeting between the two was a possible, but not confirmed, according to State Department officials.

Mr Pompeo said: “Chairman Kim made a commitment to denucleari­se. The world demanded that [he] do so in the UN Security Council resolution­s.

“To the extent they are behaving in a manner inconsiste­nt with that. They are in violation of one or both the UN Security Council resolution­s.

“We can see we still have a ways to go to achieve the ultimate outcome we’re looking for.” Mr Trump on Thursday tweeted his thanks to the North Korean leader “for your nice letter – I look forward to seeing you soon!” The White House did not provide details on the specific content of the letter from Mr Kim or of Mr Trump’s reply.

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the letters addressed their commitment to work toward North Korea’s “complete denucleari­sation”.

Ms Sanders said no second meeting was “locked in” as a follow-up to the Singapore summit in June, but they remain open to discussion­s.

Mr Trump in his tweet expressed gratitude to Mr Kim “for keeping your word” on the return of the remains of more than 50 American service members killed during the Korean War.

Vice-president Mike Penceandus­militaryle­aders received the remains in Hawaii during a sombre ceremony on Wednesday.

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