Santa Fe New Mexican

Pompeo: U.S. must give Kim security assurances

- By Ken Thomas

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Sunday that the United States will need to “provide security assurances” to North Korea’s Kim Jong Un if the adversarie­s are to reach a nuclear deal, describing the stakes of President Donald Trump’s upcoming summit with Kim.

Pompeo met with Kim last week in North Korea, helping set the stage for Trump’s historic summit with the North Korean leader in Singapore on June 12.

Trump’s goal is for North Korea to get rid of its nuclear weapons in a permanent and verifiable way. In return, the U.S. is willing to help the impoverish­ed nation strengthen its economy. Pompeo was asked on Fox News

Sunday whether the U.S. was in effect telling Kim he could stay in power if he met the U.S. demands. Pompeo said: “We will have to provide security assurances, to be sure.”

The top U.S. diplomat did not elaborate, but his comment could refer to the type of assurances North Korea has sought in the past. A statement issued during internatio­nal negotiatio­ns with North Korea in 2005 over its nuclear weapons developmen­t said the “United States affirmed that it has no nuclear weapons on the Korean Peninsula and has no intention to attack or invade (North Korea) with nuclear or convention­al weapons.”

The North has said it needs nuclear weapons to counter what it believes is a U.S. effort to strangle its economy and overthrow the Kim government.

“Make no mistake about it, America’s interest here is preventing the risk that North Korea will launch a nuclear weapon into L.A. or Denver or to the very place we’re sitting here this morning,” Pompeo said from Washington. “That’s our objective, that’s the end state the president has laid out and that’s the mission that he sent me on this past week, to put us on the trajectory to go achieve that.”

Pressed in a separate interview on whether the U.S. would seek regime change, Pompeo said “only time will tell how these negotiatio­ns will proceed.”

“The president uses language that says ‘we’ll see,’ ” Pompeo told CBS’

Face the Nation. “The American leadership under President Trump has its eyes wide open.”

North Korea said Saturday that all of the tunnels at the country’s northeaste­rn nuclear test site will be destroyed by explosion in less than two weeks, ahead of Kim’s summit with Trump. Observatio­n and research facilities and groundbase­d guard units will also be removed, the North said. Pompeo praised it as “one step along the way.”

John Bolton, the president’s national security adviser, described the types of steps that North Korea would need to take as part of a denucleari­zation process, including the potential involvemen­t of a processing center in Tennessee.

“The implementa­tion of the decision means getting rid of all the nuclear weapons, dismantlin­g them, taking them to Oak Ridge, Tennessee,” Bolton said in an interview with ABC’s

This Week. “It means getting rid of the uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessi­ng capabiliti­es,” adding the process would also need to address North Korea’s ballistic missiles.

“I don’t think anybody believes you’re going to sign the complete ending of the nuclear program in one day. But we are also very much interested in operationa­lizing the commitment as quickly as possible,” Bolton said. Bolton said in an interview with CNN’s State of the Union that North Korea should not “look for economic aid from us. I think what the prospect for North Korea is to become a normal nation, to behave and interact with the rest of the world the way South Korea does.”

“The prospect for North Korea is unbelievab­ly strong if they’ll commit to denucleari­zation. That’s what the president is going to say,” he said.

Pompeo said private-sector Americans could help rebuild North Korea’s energy grid and develop the country’s infrastruc­ture. He described the possibilit­y of American agricultur­e being used to “support North Korea so they can eat meat and have healthy lives.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States