Dayton Daily News

Meeting with North Korean diplomat, Pompeo postponed

- Austin Ramzy ©2018 The New York Times

HONG KONG — A meeting in New York this week between Secretary of St a te Mike Pompeo and North Korea’s leading nuclear weapons negotiator has been called off, the State Department said Wednesday.

The meeting, which had been scheduled for today, “will now take place at a later date,” Heather Nauert, a State Department spokes- woman, said in a written statement. “We will recon- vene when our respective schedules permit.”

No reason was given for the decision, and the state- ment did not indicate which

side requested it. The postponeme­nt of the meeting threw another wrench in Washington’s efforts to get North Korea to denucleari­ze.

The State Department had said earlier that Pompeo

planned to meet with Kim Yong Chol, North Korea’s for

mer intelligen­ce chief and top diplomat. They were expected to discuss the goals establishe­d at the June sum- mit meeting in Singapore between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader, “including achieving the final, fully verified denucleari­zation” of North Korea, Nauert said.

Pompeo traveled to North Korea last month and met with the North Korean leader, who said he would allow outside inspectors to visit a nuclear testing site the North said it had destroyed.

The two men also discussed a potential second summit meeting with Trump. But the abrupt postpone- ment of today’s meeting has raised questions about

the potential for progress on negotiatio­ns over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs.

Pyongyang has said it wants a declaratio­n of a formal end to the Korean War, which was only halted under an armistice. It has also called for an easing of sanctions in exchange for steps toward denucleari­zation.

The United States, however, wants North Korea to provide a full accounting of its nuclear program as a start to the process and has resisted any easing of sanctions.

South Korean officials said that negotiatio­ns were moving ahead and cautioned against placing too much significan­ce on the delayed meeting.

“I don’t think the North Korea-U.S. talks have been canceled or dialogue has

lost steam,” said Kim Euikyeom, a spokesman for President Moon Jae-in of South Korea, the Yonhap News Agency reported.

Canceled meetings have been a regular feature of interactio­ns between the United States and North Korea over the past year. But talks have thus far even- tually proceeded after delays.

Trump called off the summit meeting with Kim Jong Un in May but then announced it was back on after he met in early June with Kim Yong Chol. The president also abruptly canceled Pompeo’s trip to North Korea in August, citing a lack of progress in talks. But Pompeo traveled to Pyongyang in October, his fourth trip in less than a year.

 ??  ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo traveled to North Korea last month and met with North Korea’s leader. But the abrupt postponeme­nt of today’s meeting has raised questions about the potential for progress on nuclear negotiatio­ns.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo traveled to North Korea last month and met with North Korea’s leader. But the abrupt postponeme­nt of today’s meeting has raised questions about the potential for progress on nuclear negotiatio­ns.

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