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North Korea's Kim to invite U.S. experts for nuclear site shutdown as Trump presses for full denuclearisation


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North Korea's Kim to invite U.S. experts for nuclear site shutdown as Trump presses for full denuclearisation

By Hyonhee Shin

 

2018-04-28T045205Z_1_LYNXMPEE3R04S_RTROPTP_4_NORTHKOREA-SOUTHKOREA-SUMMIT.JPG

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (inside a vehicle) bids farewell to South Korean President Moon Jae-in as he leaves after a farewell ceremony at the truce village of Panmunjom inside the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, South Korea, April 27, 2018. Korea Summit Press Pool/Pool via Reuters

 

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un plans to invite experts and journalists from the United States and South Korea when the country shuts its nuclear test site in May, Seoul officials said, as U.S. President Trump pressed for total denuclearisation ahead of his own unprecedented meeting with Kim.

 

On Friday, Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowed "complete denuclearisation" of the Korean peninsula in the first inter-Korean summit in more than a decade, but the declaration did not include concrete steps to reach that goal.

 

North Korea's state media had said before the summit that Pyongyang would immediately suspend nuclear and missile tests, scrap its nuclear test site and instead pursue economic growth and peace.

 

Kim told Moon that he would soon invite the experts and journalists to "open to the international community" the dismantling of the facilities, the Blue House said on Sunday.

 

"The United States, though inherently hostile to North Korea, will get to know once our talk begins that I am not the kind of person who will use nuclear weapons against the South or the United States across the Pacific," Moon's press secretary Yoon Young-chan quoted Kim as saying.

 

"There is no reason for us to possess nuclear weapons while suffering difficulties if mutual trust with the United States is built through frequent meetings from now on, and an end to the war and non-aggression are promised."

 

Kim said there were two additional, larger tunnels that remain "in a very good condition" at the Punggye-ri test site beyond the existing one, which experts have said has collapsed after repeated explosions, rendering much of the site useless.

 

Kim's promise shows his willingness to "pre-emptively and actively" respond to inspection efforts to be made as part of the denuclearisation process, Yoon said.

 

To facilitate future cross-border cooperation, Kim pledged to scrap the unique time zone Pyongyang created in 2015. He said the North would move its clocks forward 30 minutes to be in sync with the South, nine hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time.

 

Kim also reaffirmed that he would not use military force against the South and raised the need for an institutional mechanism to prevent unintended escalations, Yoon said.

 

NEXT STEPS

Late Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump told Moon in a phone call that he was pleased the leaders of the two Koreas reaffirmed the goal of complete denuclearisation during their summit, Seoul officials said on Sunday.

 

During a Middle East trip on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Washington would require North Korea in any deal to "take irreversible" steps to demonstrate its commitment to denuclearisation.

 

He told ABC TV that there was a real opportunity for negotiations between Kim and Trump and that he had a clear mission from the White House to discuss American detainees and a verifiable mechanism for denuclearisation with Kim.

 

Trump is also preparing to pull the United States out of the international 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, reached under his predecessor Barack Obama, barring an agreement in talks with European partners to tighten its terms.

 

Pompeo was asked whether there was any contradiction between Washington trying to negotiate a nuclear deal with North Korea and also threatening to jettison the accord with Iran.

 

"I don't think Kim Jong Un is staring at the Iran deal and saying, 'Oh goodness, if they get out of that, I won't talk to the Americans any more,'" Pompeo told reporters. "There are higher priorities that he is more concerned about than whether or not the Americans stay in the (Iran deal)."

 

Moon and Trump agreed on the need for an early summit between Trump and Kim, and explored two to three potential locations, one of which Moon suggested, the Blue House said.

 

The candidates for the venue did not include North Korea, the United States or the demilitarized zone dividing the two Koreas, a Blue House official told reporters, declining to elaborate.

 

A senior U.S. official has said Singapore is being considered as a possible venue for the Trump-Kim summit.

 

"Trump said it was good news for not only the two Koreas but the whole world that they affirmed the goal of realising a nuclear-free Korean peninsula through a complete denuclearisation," Blue House spokesman Kim Eui-kyeom told a separate briefing.

 

"Moon told Trump that Kim said he and Trump would get along with each other,...and Trump said he was looking forward to talks with Kim and there would be a very good result."

 

Trump, who called the 75-minute chat "a long and very good talk" on Twitter, said his summit with Kim would take place sometime in the next three to four weeks.

 

"It's going be a very important meeting, the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula," he said at a campaign rally in Washington, Michigan, on Saturday.

 

The White House said Trump and Moon during the call "emphasised that a peaceful and prosperous future for North Korea is contingent upon its complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearisation."

 

Most of the specific commitments outlined in the official declaration signed by Kim and Moon focussed on inter-Korean relations and did not clear up the question of whether Pyongyang is willing to give up its arsenal of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

 

Abe's office said on Sunday that Trump and Abe highlighted the significance of Pyongyang's taking concrete steps towards denuclearisation in their phone call.

 

Trump had informed Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that he would urge North Korea to promptly resolve its abductions of Japanese citizens, the White House said.

 

Moon also had a phone call with Abe on Sunday and said he had discussed the abduction issue with Kim during the summit "in substantial detail," the Blue House spokesman said.

 

Pyongyang admitted in 2002 to kidnapping 13 Japanese in the 1970s and 1980s to train spies. Five of them returned to Japan, but Tokyo suspects that hundreds more may have been taken.

 

"Moon relayed Abe's wish for a normalisation of bilateral ties to Kim based on the clearing of historical legacy issues, and that Kim expressed his willingness to talk to Japan at any time," the official said.

 

Later on Sunday, Moon informed Russian President Vladimir Putin of the summit's outcome in a separate call, and proposed a joint study on trilateral cooperation over rail, gas and power infrastructure involving North Korea, the Blue House said.

 

Putin stressed the need for the summit to lead to trilateral projects, and invited Moon to Russia for a summit and the World Cup in June, Moon's office said.

 

(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin, Christine Kim, Haejin Choi and Soyoung Kim in SEOUL, Thomas Wilson in TOKYO, Lesley Wroughton in TEL AVIV and Amanda Becker in WASHINGTON, Michigan; editing by Gerry Doyle and Mark Heinrich)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-04-30
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This is great news and of course hardly covered by the shameful main stream media. Think and say what you like about Trump but he has the capabilities to get REAL things done. Obama should be handing his head in shame. He was a disaster for this and most other regions with his 'international cross boarder trading', allowing for currency manipulation and his many bailouts. He was nothing but a Public Speaker.  Trump is a doer and achiever it seems and we'll all be better off with stabilization on the Korean Peninsular.

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14 minutes ago, FitnessHealthTravel said:

This is great news and of course hardly covered by the shameful main stream media. Think and say what you like about Trump but he has the capabilities to get REAL things done. Obama should be handing his head in shame. He was a disaster for this and most other regions with his 'international cross boarder trading', allowing for currency manipulation and his many bailouts. He was nothing but a Public Speaker.  Trump is a doer and achiever it seems and we'll all be better off with stabilization on the Korean Peninsular.

So you have not been paying any attention whatsoever... mainstream media is all over it. Except for the bull blunder you're spouting'.

 

No bailouts - no US financial dominance as you have known it for your entire life.

 

I would have prosecuted the banksters, but without the bailout the whole US financial house of cards woulda collapsed. Merci 44.

Edited by mikebike
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Trump is nowhere near any Nobel Peace Prize- the man took the World close to nuclear argemmenon and the deaths of millions by bellicosity and  personal insults. It is President Moon who stepped in and brought North Korea to the table with the prodding of the Chinese.

I will give Trump credit if when he meets with Kim and Kim agrees to denuclearize Trump gives him a fair timeframe and follows through on all agreements to include a pledge not to invade the North and signing  a peace treaty that ends the Korean War.

 

Once all this is done- the Nobel Peace Prize should go to Trump; Kim and President Moon.

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3 hours ago, Boon Mee said:

As everyone is saying, Trump deserves the Noble Peace Prize for bringing NK to the bargaining table. 

Everyone?  Has this been reported on TheOnion?

 

p.s. I get it that it's a joke . . .

Edited by quandow
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5 hours ago, BuaBS said:

I wonder what has been said in Beijing to make Kim do a 180.

North Korea does not need any more test after 6 test ,the same as India and Pakistan only needed 6 test to proclaim that they needed no more test to be able to produce a lot more bombs .So Kim Jung-un has not turned around at all. He will now have North Korea in a few years the next nuclear power in the world.

Edited by AsiaHand
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