Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mcconnell: N. Korea plays games

Trump aware of situation, Senate majority leader says

- By Bruce Schreiner The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — As the U.S. and North Korea discuss a potentiall­y on-again summit, President Donald Trump is “fully aware of the games” North Korean leaders have played in the past and won’t be “snookered into a bad deal,” the Senate’s top leader said Monday.

After paying tribute to Kentucky’s war dead at a Memorial Day service, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell told reporters he remains hopeful that negotiatio­ns between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un could lead to a nuclear-free Korean peninsula.

But Mcconnell cautioned that generation­s of North Korean dictators have “tried to spin us.”

“And the president, I think, is fully aware of the games they’ve played in the past,” the Kentucky Republican said. “But look, it’s good that they’re likely to meet. I think it’s better to meet than not. And we’re hopeful that somehow at the end of all of this, we’ll have a Korean peninsula without nuclear weapons.”

American and North Korean officials have been engaged in talks in what’s been an on-off-perhapson-again summit between Trump and Kim. Trump withdrew from a planned June 12 Singapore summit with Kim last Thursday, but has said it could still happen.

Mcconnell labeled the back-andforth on whether a summit will take place as “classic North Korean behavior.” For decades, North Korean leaders have “basically played games in order to try to get relief from sanctions,” the senator said.

“I think the president understand­s that and is not likely to be snookered into a bad deal,” Mcconnell said.

Verificati­on would be a crucial element of any deal to ensure North Korea complies with any agreement, he said. That would involve “having people on the ground in North Korea,” he said.

“That will be an interestin­g test as to whether or not they’re really willing to not only give up their nuclear weapons but allow us to verify,” Mcconnell said.

On an issue closer to home, Mcconnell hailed congressio­nal passage of legislatio­n to expand private care for military veterans as an alternativ­e to the troubled Veterans Affairs health system.

The measure’s final approval last week represente­d a “big step in the direction of taking better care of our veterans,” the senator said.

 ?? Bruce Schreiner ?? The Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell says if President Donald Trump meets with North Korea he won’t be “snookered into a bad deal.”
Bruce Schreiner The Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell says if President Donald Trump meets with North Korea he won’t be “snookered into a bad deal.”

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