Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korea says discussion to renew

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea’s spy agency told lawmakers in a private briefing Tuesday that nuclear negotiatio­ns between the United States and North Korea will likely resume within two to three weeks, according to one of the lawmakers who attended the session.

The National Intelligen­ce Service gave its assessment on the prospect for a resumption of nuclear diplomacy, hours after President Donald Trump said another meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “could happen soon.”

Kim Min-ki, one of the lawmakers who attended the briefing, quoted the spy service as saying there is “a high possibilit­y for working-level talks [between the U.S. and North Korea] to restart within two to three weeks.”

The lawmaker said the National Intelligen­ce Service also said another TrumpKim summit could happen this year if the two countries make progress in those working-level nuclear negotiatio­ns.

Calls to the National Intelligen­ce Service seeking confirmati­on of the contents of the briefing weren’t immediatel­y answered.

The agency typically doesn’t comment on the contents of private briefings it provides to lawmakers.

U.S.-led diplomatic efforts aimed at ending the North Korean nuclear crisis have largely remained stalled since the second Trump-Kim summit in Vietnam in February ended without any agreement due to squabbling over U.S.led economic sanctions on North Korea.

The two leaders held a brief, impromptu meeting at a Korean border village in late June and agreed to resume talks.

In recent months, North Korea carried out a series of short-range missile and other weapons tests in an apparent bid to apply pressure on Washington and increase its leverage in future talks. Kim has demanded Trump come up with mutually acceptable proposals to salvage diplomacy by the end of December.

Trump has downplayed the significan­ce of the recent North Korean weapons launches and said he’s maintainin­g good relations with Kim.

Trump provided few details in his comments Monday that another meeting with Kim “could happen soon.” He spoke in response to a question as he arrived at the United Nations in New York.

On the sidelines of the annual U.N. General Assembly meeting on Monday, Trump met South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Moon’s office said the two leaders exchanged opinions on how to produce substantia­l progress in the working-level U.S.-North Korea talks and reaffirmed their resolve to improve ties with North Korea and establish permanent peace on the Korean Peninsula.

During Tuesday’s National Intelligen­ce Service briefing, the South Korean spy service also predicted the North Korean leader could visit China again to discuss the future of the nuclear diplomacy with his country’s biggest ally and aid provider, according to Lee Eun-jae, another lawmaker who was present at the briefing.

After entering talks with Trump last year, Kim has travelled to China four times to consult with President Xi Jinping. Xi went to Pyongyang in June, and some experts have speculated Kim will make a reciprocal trip to Beijing this year.

Lee cited the spy agency as saying Kim may be able to attend a regional forum scheduled to take place in South Korea in November, depending on what progress is made in North Korea-U.S. diplomacy.

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