Los Angeles Times

U.S.-N. Korea meeting delayed

Pompeo won’t see his counterpar­t in New York this week as disputes grow.

- BY SIMON DENYER Denyer writes for the Washington Post. The Post’s Min Joo Kim in Seoul contribute­d to this report.

TOKYO — Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo’s planned meeting with his North Korean counterpar­t in New York this week has been called off at the last minute, the State Department announced Wednesday without giving any explanatio­n or new date.

South Korea’s government warned against reading too much into the postponeme­nt. Neverthele­ss, there have been signs of a growing rift between Washington and Pyongyang over the denucleari­zation process and the right time to lift sanctions.

The meeting was scheduled to take place Thursday, but State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said it would now take place “at a later date.”

“We will reconvene when our schedules permit,” she said in a statement. “Ongoing conversati­ons continue to take place. The United States remains focused on fulfilling the commitment­s agreed to by President Trump and Chairman Kim [Jong Un] at the Singapore summit in June.”

South Korea’s national broadcaste­r KBS reported that the North Korean negotiatin­g team, led by Kim Yong Chol, was supposed to get on a Wednesday flight from Beijing to New York.

But KBS said that it was unclear whether the team had even arrived in Beijing and that Kim had apparently canceled his New York flight early Tuesday.

The postponeme­nt came at a tricky time in the nuclear negotiatio­ns.

North Korea has said it wants both sides to take “simultaneo­us and phased” steps, with concession­s from Pyongyang matched by concession­s from Washington, to reassure North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that he can safely scale back or dismantle his nuclear weapons program.

The United States takes a fundamenta­lly different approach, demanding North Korea fully denucleari­ze before sanctions are lifted.

In the last few weeks, the two sides appear to have grown further apart and North Korea has upped its demands. It had been asking the United States to formally declare an end to the 1950-53 Korean War, but now it is arguing forcefully that it needs relief from sanctions before it takes any further steps.

On Friday, a commentary published by the head of a North Korean Foreign Ministry think tank warned that Pyongyang might even restart its nuclear weapons program if sanctions were not lifted.

At the same time, South Korean government advisors and experts say Pyongyang is not prepared to hand over a list of its nuclear and missile facilities, believing such a document would in effect give the U.S. a list of potential military targets.

If these disputes are behind the postponeme­nt of the meeting, it would not be the first time the negotiatio­ns have run into troubled waters.

In May, Trump announced that his planned summit with Kim had been canceled, citing a series of hostile and angry statements coming out of Pyongyang.

But soon afterward, thanks to mediation from South Korean President Moon Jae-in, Kim Yong Chol flew to the United States to meet Pompeo and personally deliver a letter to Trump that paved the way for the June summit.

In August, a planned trip by Pompeo to Pyongyang was also canceled when negotiatio­ns hit an impasse, with the secretary of State eventually making the trip last month.

Kim Eui-keum, a spokesman for South Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House, advised against reading too much into the latest setback.

“This has happened in the past, so we don’t need to overemphas­ize this,” he told reporters. “I also don’t think this means U.S.-North Korea talks, both at the high level and summit level, have lost their momentum.”

Many experts doubt Pyongyang’s willingnes­s to surrender its nuclear weapons and believe it has been stringing Trump along to gain whatever concession­s it can.

Joel S. Wit, a former State Department official with extensive experience of negotiatin­g with the North Koreans, says Washington is sticking to the “old playbook,” one that has failed repeatedly, particular­ly in its insistence that North Korea first take steps such as denucleari­zation before the U.S. does anything.

Wit, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center think tank, has become much more pessimisti­c in recent weeks. “I think the U.S. is going to miss this opportunit­y essentiall­y because there is no one below Trump [who] is capable of thinking out of the box,” he wrote in an email this week.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Pool Photo ?? NORTH KOREA’S Kim Yong Chol, left, and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo in Pyongyang in July.
Andrew Harnik Pool Photo NORTH KOREA’S Kim Yong Chol, left, and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo in Pyongyang in July.

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