Las Vegas Review-Journal

China contradict­s Trump on ‘freeze-for-freeze’ deal

- The Associated Press

BEIJING — China on Thursday reiterated its call for an agreement between North Korea and the U.S. under which the North would gain concession­s if it freezes its nuclear weapons program, apparently contradict­ing remarks a day earlier by President Donald Trump.

Foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang Geng said China’s position has not changed and the “freeze-forfreeze” initiative, under which the U.S. and South Korea would suspend large-scale military exercises in return, remained a “first step.”

“We believe that the freeze-forfreeze initiative is the most viable and reasonable plan against the current backdrop, which cannot only alleviate the current tensions, but also addresses the most urgent security concerns of all sides,” Geng told reporters at a regular briefing.

Such an agreement would “create opportunit­ies and conditions for the resumption of peace talks, and find breakthrou­ghs to get out of this stalemate,” Geng said.

The U.S. has long dismissed the proposal, saying North Korea must unilateral­ly cease its program before negotiatio­ns can begin. On Wednesday, Trump told reporters that China had agreed with the U.S. on that point during his 12-day trip through Asia that included a state visit to China, where he was hosted by President Xi Jinping.

“President Xi recognizes that a nuclear North Korea is a grave threat to China, and we agreed that we would not accept a so-called freezefor-freeze agreement, like those that have consistent­ly failed in the past,” Trump said.

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