San Francisco Chronicle

Trump: ‘We’ll have to see’ on summit

- By Mark Landler, Choe Sang-Hun and Jane Perlez Mark Landler, Choe Sang-Hun and Jane Perlez are New York Times writers.

WASHINGTON — The White House brushed aside threats by North Korea on Wednesday to cancel an upcoming summit meeting between President Trump and the North’s leader, Kim Jong Un, saying it was still “hopeful” the meeting will happen — but that Trump would be fine if it did not.

When Trump was asked Wednesday about the prospects for the summit to go off as planned, he was noncommitt­al, telling reporters in the Oval Office, “We’ll have to see.” Trump said he would still insist on the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula in the talks.

In its warning Wednesday, North Korea said Kim could withdraw from the meeting over Washington’s demand that it unilateral­ly abandon its nuclear arsenal.

U.S. officials acknowledg­ed that the North appeared to be seeking to exploit a gap in the administra­tion’s messages about North Korea — between the hard-line views of national security adviser John Bolton and the more conciliato­ry tone of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

In a recent television interview, Bolton said North Korea should receive no benefits, including the lifting of sanctions, until it had surrendere­d its entire nuclear infrastruc­ture.

Pompeo, by contrast, put the emphasis on the U.S. investment that would flow into North Korea if it agreed to relinquish its nuclear arsenal. He, too, said that the North would have to agree to “complete, verifiable, irreversib­le denucleari­zation,” the technical shorthand used by the administra­tion to describe its bargaining position with Pyongyang.

The president has shifted between a hardline and more conciliato­ry tone in his statements about the North. He has not yet responded to the warning Wednesday issued by the North’s first vice foreign minister, Kim Kye Gwan, which took direct aim at Bolton.

Few analysts said North Korea would ultimately go so far as to cancel the Singapore meeting. Rather, the threat to withdraw was an attempt to raise the price that Washington would have to pay to get any significan­t concession­s on the North’s nuclear program, analysts said.

North Korea’s abrupt change in tone began Wednesday, when it indefinite­ly postponed high-level talks with South Korea.

 ?? Park Chul-hong / Associated Press ?? A South Korean fighter jet takes off during the Max Thunder joint military exercise with the U.S.
Park Chul-hong / Associated Press A South Korean fighter jet takes off during the Max Thunder joint military exercise with the U.S.

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