Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

N. Korea seeks progress

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UNITED NATIONS — Calling for more trust, North Korea’s foreign minister urged the U.S. on Saturday to keep moving past what he called seven decades of entrenched hostility if Washington wants to restart stalled negotiatio­ns meant to rid Pyongyang of its nuclear bombs.

Boiling the rivals’ diplomatic standoff down to the North’s deepening feeling of mistrust, Ri Yong Ho sought to lay out a vision of peace on the troubled Korean Peninsula — provided the North gets what it wants from the U.S.

Mr. Ri, standing at a podium at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, said North Korea is ready to implement the points that his leader, Kim Jong Un, and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to in June during a summit in Singapore.

But his comments were infused with what came across as impatience at the slow pace of progress in a process the world hopes will cause Pyongyang to abandon an arsenal of nucleartip­ped missiles that aims to accurately target the entire U.S. mainland.

In recent weeks, Mr. Kim has said he would permanentl­y dismantle North Korea’s main nuclear complex, but only if the U.S. takes unspecifie­d correspond­ing measures. Mr. Kim has also promised to accept internatio­nal inspectors to monitor the closing of a key missile test site and launch pad.

The North, however, doesn’t “see any correspond­ing response” from Washington, Mr. Ri said, and the U.S. is increasing pressure and sanctions.

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