Korean leaders set 'denuclearization'
goal, Trump says will maintain pressure
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[April 28, 2018]
By Christine Kim, Josh Smith and Roberta Rampton
SEOUL/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The leaders of
North and South Korea pledged at a historic summit on Friday to work for
"complete denuclearization" of the Korean peninsula, but U.S. President
Donald Trump said he would maintain pressure on Pyongyang through
sanctions ahead of his own unprecedented meeting with North Korea's Kim
Jong Un.
The meeting between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in produced
a day of dramatic images and a sweeping declaration of goodwill. But it
was short on specific commitments and failed to clear up the question of
whether Pyongyang is really willing to give up nuclear missiles that now
threaten the United States.
Meeting at the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone that has divided the
Koreas for more than six decades, Kim and Moon announced they would work
with the United States and China this year to declare an official end to
the 1950s Korean War, and establish a permanent peace agreement.
In an event marked by smiles, handshakes and embraces, they also
promised to pursue phased arms reduction, cease hostile acts, transform
their fortified border into a peace zone and seek talks involving other
countries, including the United States."The two leaders declare before
our people of 80 million and the entire world there will be no more war
on the Korean peninsula and a new age of peace has begun," the two sides
said.
But even as they agreed on a common goal of a "nuclear-free" peninsula,
they stopped short of spelling out exactly what that meant or how it
might come about.
Speaking at a news conference in Washington with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, Trump, who has raised expectations that his own planned
meeting with Kim in coming weeks will deliver tangible results,
expressed hope it would be productive.
(Korea: a land divided - https://tmsnrt.rs/2KdXMcS)
(A new dawn - http://tmsnrt.rs/2t8i6no)
'NOT REPEAT MISTAKES'
But he added: "We will not repeat the mistakes of past administrations.
Maximum pressure will continue until denuclearization occurs."
Trump has said Kim must completely abandon his nuclear missile program
and has credited his campaign of sanctions and military threats with
bringing Kim to the negotiating table.
Earlier he told reporters would not allow himself to be "played like a
fiddle" by North Korea like past U.S. administrations.
Many analysts say that while sanctions may be hurting North Korea, Kim
may believe he has the upper hand and is unlikely to give up his full
nuclear capability, considering it vital to the survival of his family
dynasty.
In past negotiations, North Korea has demanded the United States
withdraw its troops and remove its "nuclear umbrella" of support for the
South.
The United States stations 28,500 troops in South Korea.
On Friday, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said the United States
would seek to build trust with North Korea through confidence building
measures, but deferred to diplomats questions about the future U.S.
military presence under any peace treaty.
Kim, widely regarded by many Americans and South Koreans as a brutal
dictator, appeared to use the summit to soften his international image.
He became the first North Korean leader since the Korean War to set foot
in South Korea after shaking hands with Moon over a concrete curb
marking the border.
Scenes of Moon and Kim joking and walking together were a striking
contrast to last year's barrage of North Korean missile tests and its
largest ever nuclear test, which raised fears of war.
U.S. intelligence officials said it had been an impressive charm
offensive by Kim, but their view of him and their belief in his desire
to keep his nuclear weapons had not changed.
A U.S. administration official, who did not want to be identified, said
Trump's aides were being briefed by South Korean officials and were
looking for clarity on whether Kim made any meaningful commitment to
nuclear disarmament.
In a statement, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said any North Korea
promises would be "met with reservation, vigilance, and verification."
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who over the Easter weekend became
the first U.S. official ever known to have met Kim, told a news
conference after a NATO meeting in Brussels he believed Kim was serious
about try reaching a deal.
"The economic pressure that has been put in place by this global effort
that President Trump has led has led him to believe that it’s in his
best interest to come to the table and talk about denuclearization."
The Kim-Moon meeting was meant in part to lay some of the groundwork for
a Trump-Kim summit, which would be the first encounter between sitting
leaders of the two countries.
Trump, who has exchanged nuclear threats and personal insults with Kim
in the past year, said only time would tell, but he did not think Kim
was "playing."
"It’s never gone this far. This enthusiasm for them wanting to make a
deal ... We are going to hopefully make a deal."
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South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un walk together 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
Trump said two countries were under consideration as the site for
his meeting with Kim, which he has said could be in late May or
early June.
China, North Korea's main ally, welcomed Kim and Moon's statement
and said it was willing to keep promoting political solutions. China
is wary of being sidelined by a thaw between the two Koreas and by
the Trump-Kim summit.
Russia said it was ready to facilitate cooperation between North and
South Korea, including in railway transport and energy. Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe welcomed the summit and said he expected
North Korea to take concrete steps to carry out its promises.
As part of efforts to reduce tensions, North and South Korea agreed
to open a liaison office, stop propaganda broadcasts and allow
divided families to meet.
Days before the summit, Kim said North Korea would suspend nuclear
and long-range missile tests and dismantle its only known nuclear
test site.
But deep scepticism remains about Kim's intentions, and Daniel
Russel, until recently the most senior U.S. diplomat for Asia, said
that the joint declaration fell short of an explicit commitment to
denuclearization.
Jonathan Schanzer, an expert at Washington's Foundation for Defense
of Democracies think tank, said North Korea had made promises many
times in the past. "The question now is whether Kim Jong Un is ready
to deliver, or if this is a prelude to yet another deliberate effort
to spurn the West," he said.
Former U.S. assistant secretary of defense for East Asia, Abraham
Denmark, said that despite the warm images and friendly words,
"there is still no trust and no clear way ahead."
"We must remember: North Korea is still North Korea. Kim is still
the same person he was when he purged potential rivals, imprisoned
thousands of his people, and had his relatives killed. This was a
hopeful moment, but extreme caution is well warranted."
It is not the first time leaders of North and South Korea have
declared hopes for peace. Two earlier summits, in Pyongyang in 2000
and 2007, failed to halt North Korea's weapons programs or improve
relations in a lasting way.
Kim alluded to past failures after the latest agreement was signed,
saying: "We will make efforts to create good results by
communicating closely, in order to make sure our agreement signed
today before the entire world, will not end as just a beginning like
previous agreements before today."
Moon agreed to visit Pyongyang this year, the leaders said.
FIRST ACROSS THE LINE
Moon greeted Kim at the military demarcation line where the men
smiled and shook hands. In an unplanned moment of theater, Kim
invited Moon to step briefly across into North Korea, before the two
leaders crossed back into South Korea holding hands.
"I was excited to meet at this historic place and it is really
moving that you came all the way to the demarcation line to greet me
in person," Kim said.
"A new history starts now. An age of peace, from the starting point
of history," Kim wrote in Korean in a guest book in the South's
Peace House before talks began.
In a private session, Kim told Moon he came to the summit to end the
history of conflict and joked he was sorry for waking Moon up with
his early morning missile tests, a senior South Korean presidential
official said.
Moon and Kim continued their talks into a dinner banquet and later,
with their wives, watched a music performance and held hands as they
watched a montage of photos from their summit set to a K-pop song
that included the words "be a family again."
(Reporting by the Inter-Korean Summit Press Corps, Christine Kim and
Josh Smith in Seoul and by Roberta Rampton in WASHINGTON; Additional
reporting by Hyonhee Shin in SEOUL, David Brunnstrom, Matt
Spetalnick, Susan Heavey, Eric Beech, David Alexander, John Walcott,
Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali and Jeff Mason in WASHINGTON and Lesley
Wroughton in BRUSSELS; Writing by Matt Spetalnick and David
Brunnstrom; editing by Lincoln Feast, Robert Birsel, Frances Kerry
and Cynthia Osterman)
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