Houston Chronicle

Trump, Kim to schedule second summit

Details are undisclose­d, but worries persist over whether North Korea will give up nukes

- By Mark Landler and David E. Sanger

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will meet with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, in late February, the White House announced Friday, renewing a high-level diplomatic dialogue that has eased tensions with a rogue nuclear state but has shown no progress in eliminatin­g its nuclear arsenal.

A White House official said the date and the location of the meeting would be announced later, suggesting either that the Trump administra­tion was seeking concession­s from the North Koreans before Trump commits to the meeting or that the two sides were still haggling over the site and other logistical details. Vietnam, Thailand and Hawaii have all been mentioned as potential settings.

The announceme­nt came after a 90-minute meeting in the Oval Office between Trump and Kim Yong Chol, a former North Korean intelligen­ce chief, who has acted as the top nuclear negotiator for Kim. Trump, who had made a celebrator­y appearance after a session with the intelligen­ce chief in June to announce his first meeting with Kim Jong Un, this time stayed out of sight.

But his press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, told reporters, “We’ve continued to make progress.”

The United States, she said, will keep sanctions against North Korea in place until Kim agrees to surrender his arsenal. She added that the North had shown “good faith” in releasing imprisoned Americans.

Still, the very fact that Trump agreed to a second meeting with

Kim — after North Korea’s failure to begin dismantlin­g its arsenal following their first meeting in Singapore in June — is a sign of how quickly the president has backed away from his initial insistence on swift disarmamen­t by Pyongyang.

And it raised anew the question of whether Trump will enter a second summit better prepared than he was in Singapore. While Trump emerged from that meeting brimming with optimism and declared on Twitter that there was “no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea,” U.S. intelligen­ce officials have concluded that the country continues to produce nuclear fuel, weapons and missiles.

Trump has said in recent months that he does not expect the negotiatio­ns to produce a quick result, arguing that the halt in nuclear and missile testing by North Korea for the past 13 months — and his personal relationsh­ip with Kim — had taken the urgency out of the disarmamen­t issue.

“I got all the time in the world,” the president said in New York in September. “I don’t have to rush it.”

Kim, for his part, has balked at dealing with anybody but Trump. He rebuffed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, whom Trump put in charge of the negotiatio­ns, and told the president in a letter that he preferred to deal directly with him.

There have been no substantiv­e working-level negotiatio­ns between the two sides since the fall. While Pompeo emerged from a meeting with Kim in October declaring that the North Korean leader told him “he’s ready to allow” inspectors into a nuclear testing site that the North had blown up, that inspection has yet to happen.

Larger issues of inspection will hang over the next meeting as well. One subject under discussion with the North, according to officials of several countries briefed on the talks, is whether the country would “freeze” its nuclear fuel and weapons production during negotiatio­ns, so that the country’s arsenal does not grow while talks drag on.

“But that would require highly intrusive inspection­s, across the country,” said Jung Pak, a former senior CIA analyst now at the Brookings Institutio­n. “Previous negotiatio­ns have fallen apart because of our insistence on those inspection­s. And who is going to take North Korea’s word on whether it is truly freezing its program?”

South Korea welcomed the announceme­nt, with a government spokesman saying he expected the second Trump-Kim meeting to be “a turning point for solidifyin­g a permanent peace on the Korean Peninsula.”

 ?? Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images ?? Kim Yong-chol, left, chief negotiator for North Korea, met with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and U.S. Special Representa­tive for North Korea Stephen Biegun on Friday before speaking with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images Kim Yong-chol, left, chief negotiator for North Korea, met with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and U.S. Special Representa­tive for North Korea Stephen Biegun on Friday before speaking with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

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