Yuma Sun

Pence won’t rule out NKorea meeting

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TOKYO — U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said he has not ruled out the possibilit­y of meeting with North Korean officials at the upcoming Olympics in South Korea.

“Let me say President Trump has said he always believes in talking, but I haven’t requested any meeting,” Pence said before departing Monday on a sixday Asia trip. “But we’ll see what happens.”

Pence arrived Tuesday in Japan, where he will meet with Prime Minster Shinzo Abe and U.S. service members.

The vice president’s trip will be highlighte­d by his stop at the Pyeongchan­g Games. He said no plans have been made for him to meet with any members of the North Korean delegation.

Yet both he and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have conspicuou­sly kept the door open to such an interactio­n, while simultaneo­usly avoiding any suggestion that the U.S. was pushing or seeking to initiate one. That delicate balance has led to some verbal gymnastics as U.S. officials try to explain what is and isn’t in the offing.

“We’ve been clear in not saying there definitely will not be a meeting,” Undersecre­tary of State Steve Goldstein said as he traveled with Tillerson in Latin America. “The secretary always believes that if there’s an opportunit­y for a negotiatio­n, regardless of what the issue is, we should try to take that.”

North Korea is sending its nominal head of state, Kim Yong Nam — the highest-level visitor to the South from the North in recent memory.

Pence said his message, if he met any officials from the North, would be the same as it has been in public. “And that is that North Korea must once and for all abandon its nuclear weapons program and ballistic missile ambitions,” he said.

Pence said he aims to ensure North Korea doesn’t “hijack” the games as it participat­es on a joint team with the South, in the view of the White House. He’ll hold symbolic events of his own to highlight the North’s human rights abuses and nuclear ambitions, according to White House officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to preview the trip publicly.

“We’ll be telling the truth about North Korea at every stop,” Pence told reporters after touring missile defense facilities Monday that monitor and could respond to a launch by the North. “We’ll be ensuring that whatever cooperatio­n that’s existing between North and South Korea today on Olympic teams does not cloud the reality of a regime that must continue to be isolated by the world community.”

In South Korea, Pence will visit a memorial to the 46 South Korean sailors killed in a 2010 torpedo attack attributed to the North, and hold meetings with President Moon Jaein.

“Missile defense is essential to our national defense,” Pence said before a briefing with U.S. Northern Command at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. He touted the coming deployment of an additional 20 groundbase­d intercepto­rs that would respond to an enemy launch.

Leading the U.S. delegation to the Olympic Opening Ceremonies, Pence will bring to the games Fred Warmbier, the father of Otto Warmbier, the U.S. student who died in 2017 shortly after he was released from North Korean detention.

“He & his wife remind the world of the atrocities happening in N Korea,” Pence tweeted Monday.

The trip comes after President Donald Trump hosted a group of North Korean defectors in the Oval Office on Friday, including Ji Seong-ho, whom the president referenced in his State of the Union address last week. The White House cast the meeting as part of the Trump administra­tion’s “maximum pressure” campaign to counter the North Korean nuclear program. The plan centers around rallying the internatio­nal community to further isolate North Korea both diplomatic­ally and economical­ly.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. VICE PRESIDENT Mike Pence is escorted by Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera (left) for a meeting at Defense Ministry in Tokyo Wednesday. Pence, who arrived Tuesday in Japan, said he has not ruled out the possibilit­y of meeting with North...
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. VICE PRESIDENT Mike Pence is escorted by Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera (left) for a meeting at Defense Ministry in Tokyo Wednesday. Pence, who arrived Tuesday in Japan, said he has not ruled out the possibilit­y of meeting with North...

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