Trump still seeking talks with Kim, says top US envoy

Bloomberg

President Donald Trump will continue to seek talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as the US looks to defuse tensions following a failed summit in February, according to his administration’s top nuclear envoy.
“The United States is convinced that through continued negotiations, we can continue to close the gaps that separate our two countries and make further progress on all the goals that we committed to in Singapore,” Stephen Biegun said the Shangri-La Dialogue, a major Asian security meeting in the city-state.
“I want to emphasize the commitments we have made to the North Koreans,” he said.
“And we have made these commitments directly and indirectly, privately and publicly — to remain engaged, avoid provocations.” Biegun’s office later clarified that he meant North Korea should remain engaged, refrain from provocations such as recent missile tests, and through negotiations make progress on the Singapore commitments.
Tensions have risen since the collapse of talks at second summit in Hanoi, with each side blaming the other for the failure to reach a deal. Kim, who conducted ballistic missile tests last month in a move seen as violating United Nations sanctions, has given Trump until the end of the year to ease sanctions choking his state’s moribund economy. The US said the summit fell apart when Kim asked for too much in sanctions relief and offered too little disarmament. US National Security Advisor John Bolton said about a week ago that Biegun “can’t wait to talk to his North Korean counterpart, but they haven’t responded.”
South Korea’s Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported that North Korea executed Kim Hyok Chol, Biegun’s counterpart in the talks, along with four other foreign ministry officials in March after the failed summit.
Seoul’s presidential office suggested that reports of the envoy’s demise should be treated with some skepticism, and Biegun didn’t comment on them on Saturday.
The Singapore summit in June 2018 resulted in a bare-bones declaration that contained four main items: Normalising ties between the US and North Korea, formally ending the 1950-53 Korean War, repatriating US war remains and working toward the “complete denuclearisation” of the Korean Peninsula.
South Korean Defense Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo said differences can be overcome and it was important to maintain the momentum for dialogue. His Japanese counterpart Takeshi Iwaya expressed alarm about the threat posed by Kim’s regime, telling the gathering that North Korea has several hundred ballistic missiles and a “robust deterrence” was needed.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend