The Day

CIA chief Pompeo met N. Korea’s Kim

- By SHANE HARRIS, CAROL D. LEONNIG, GREG JAFFE and DAVID NAKAMURA

CIA Director Mike Pompeo made a top-secret visit to North Korea over Easter weekend as an envoy for President Donald Trump to meet with that country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, according to two people with direct knowledge of the trip.

The extraordin­ary meeting between one of Trump’s most trusted emmisaries and the authoritar­ian head of a rogue state was part of an effort to lay the groundwork for direct talks between Trump and Kim about North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, according to the two people, who requested anonymity because of the highly classified nature of the talks.

The clandestin­e mission, which has not previously been reported, came soon after Pompeo was nominated to be secretary of state.

“I’m optimistic that the United States government can set the conditions for that appropriat­ely so that the president and the North Korean leader can have that conversati­on that will set us down the course of achieving a diplomatic outcome that America so desperatel­y — America and the world so desperatel­y need,” Pompeo told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week during his confirmati­on hearing.

Speaking at his Mar-a-Lago resort on Tuesday, Trump appeared to allude to the extraordin­ary face-to-face meeting between Kim and Pompeo when he said the U.S. has had direct talks with North Korea “at very high levels.” The president didn’t elaborate.

Trump said that he would sit down with Kim probably in early June, if not sooner.

Pompeo has taken the lead on the administra­tion’s negotiatio­ns with Pyongyang. His meeting with Kim marks the highest-level meeting between the two countries since 2000, when then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright met with Kim Jong Il, the current leader’s father to discuss strategic issues. Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper Jr. visited the country in 2014 to secure the release of two American captives and met with a lower-level intelligen­ce official.

The CIA declined to comment. The White House also declined to comment saying it would not discuss the CIA director’s travels. The North Korean government also declined to comment.

About a week after Pompeo’s trip to North Korea, U.S. officials said that officials there had directly confirmed that Kim was willing to negotiate about potential denucleari­zation, according to administra­tion officials, a sign that both sides had opened a new communicat­ions channel ahead of the summit meeting and that the administra­tion believed North Korea was serious about holding a summit.

“We have had direct talks at very high levels, extremely high levels with North Korea,” Trump said Tuesday during a bilateral meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at Mar-a-Lago, his winter resort.

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