Los Angeles Times

North Korea confirms Trump summit, U.S. says

Meeting with Kim will include nuclear issues, White House affirms.

- By Noah Bierman and Tracy Wilkinson noah.bierman@latimes.com tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — U.S. and North Korean officials have engaged in secret backchanne­l talks and Pyongyang has committed to a summit between President Trump and Kim Jong Un that will touch on denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula, a White House official said Sunday.

The White House said March 8 that Trump had accepted an invitation from Kim to meet, but the government in Pyongyang did not officially confirm the meeting until now. The date and the venue have still not been set.

No sitting U.S. president has ever met with a North Korean leader, and Trump’s offer to do so without preconditi­ons stunned American allies in the region and U.S. foreign policy veterans.

The proposed summit grew out of an easing of tensions between North and South Korea this year. In March, several senior South Korean officials met with Kim in Pyongyang and then flew to Washington, where they told Trump that Kim had extended an invitation to meet as early as May.

It has been unclear whether North Korea would be willing to talk about giving up its nuclear weapons program, the U.S. goal in any negotiatio­ns.

Kim’s government tested a powerful nuclear device in September and has tested interconti­nental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the continenta­l United States.

The White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in discussing internal talks, said recent secret meetings between North Korean and U.S. officials secured Pyongyang’s commitment to proceed with a summit.

The official did not say where the meetings occurred, but U.S. officials have dealt with North Korea on the sidelines of the United Nations in New York, where North Korea has a diplomatic mission, and at other internatio­nal settings. Washington and Pyongyang do not have diplomatic relations.

The summit site still is an open question.

U.S. officials say Trump would not go to Pyongyang, the isolated nation’s capital. So speculatio­n has focused on sites in China, in neutral Switzerlan­d, or in the demilitari­zed zone that separates North and South Korea.

The potential detente comes after Trump and Kim exchanged crude insults last year — “little rocket man” versus “deranged U.S. dotard” — and bellicose threats of nuclear war as Kim continued his nuclear and missile tests, including some that flew over Japan.

But North Korea’s economy has been hurt by U.S. and internatio­nal sanctions, and South Korea’s government has sought to promote talks.

Trump will meet April 17 in Florida with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose government was caught off guard by Trump’s offer to negotiate directly with North Korea.

 ?? Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images ?? THE DATE and venue for the U.S.-North Korea summit have not been set.
Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images THE DATE and venue for the U.S.-North Korea summit have not been set.

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