The Mercury News

Mattis hails return of U.S. remains.

- By David Nakamura and Dan Lamothe The Washington Post

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump on Friday hailed the apparent handover by North Korea of the remains of 55 U.S. service members, publicly thanking leader Kim Jong Un for “keeping his word” as the White House tries to maintain momentum on denucleari­zation talks.

Trump praised Kim during remarks on the South Lawn and announced that Vice President Mike Pence will attend a repatriati­on ceremony when the remains of the troops killed in the Korean War are transferre­d to Hawaii next week after being examined at Osan Air Base in South Korea.

“I want to thank Chairman Kim in front of the media for fulfilling a promise that he made to me,” Trump said after a U.S. military plane carrying the remains in coffins landed at Osan. “These incredible American heroes will soon lay at rest on sacred American soil.”

The turnover marked the first transfer of U.S. remains from North Korea since 2007, and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis raised the possibilit­y that the Pentagon could deploy military teams to the North for the first time since 2005 to continue to search for fallen U.S. troops.

Pence, whose father was a Korean War veteran, said in a statement that he would travel to Hawaii on Aug. 1 to receive the remains.

Former U.S. government officials cautioned that North Korea’s action — while a positive step for military families which have sought closure for decades — should not be viewed as a sign that Kim’s regime is demonstrat­ing a greater willingnes­s to work toward denucleari­zation.

“It fits a very familiar pattern of North Korea’s negotiatin­g square-dancing,” said Daniel Russel, who served as a high-ranking Asia policy official in the Obama administra­tion. “You make very vague, very sweeping proclamati­ons and declaratio­ns about your willingnes­s to do right by mankind and achieve global denucleari­zation. Then you move slowly, you try to put the focus on a very small, very concrete issue, and you make it complicate­d and difficult. The breakthrou­gh then bears no connection to denucleari­zation and substitute­s for progress.”

Trump, who last month became the first sitting U.S. president to meet with a North Korean leader, sought to use the moment to tout progress on his signature foreign policy issue ahead of the midterm elections this fall.

A week after the June 12 summit, Trump falsely asserted that North Korea had already turned over the remains of 200 service members.

In his remarks Friday, which came during an appearance before reporters to tout economic progress, the president recalled that during his 2016 campaign he heard from families of Korean War casualties about the importance of bringing the remains of their loved ones home.

“They asked if I could do something about it,” Trump said. “I’d look at them, I’d say, ‘We don’t get along too well with that country.’ They said, ‘Whatever you can do.’ And it’s something that was very important to me.”

The nuclear talks have faltered since the Singapore summit, however, as Pyongyang has lambasted the United States for what it has called the Trump administra­tion’s “unilateral and gangster-like demand for denucleari­zation.”

 ??  ??
 ?? KIM HONG-JI — POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? A soldier carries a casket containing the possible remains of a U.S. soldier killed in the Korean War during a ceremony at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea.
KIM HONG-JI — POOL PHOTO VIA AP A soldier carries a casket containing the possible remains of a U.S. soldier killed in the Korean War during a ceremony at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States