Pompeo to head to North Korea as doubts
mount about its intentions
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[July 03, 2018]
By David Brunnstrom and Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo will leave for North Korea on Thursday seeking
agreement on a plan for the country's denuclearization, despite mounting
doubts about Pyongyang's willingness to abandon a weapons program that
threatens the United States and its allies.
In announcing Pompeo's travel plans on Monday, White House spokeswoman
Sarah Sanders said the United States was "continuing to make progress"
in talks with North Korea. She declined to confirm or deny recent media
reports of intelligence assessments saying North Korea has been
expanding its weapons capabilities.
The State Department said Pompeo would head on Saturday from Pyongyang
to Tokyo, where he would discuss North Korean denuclearization with
Japanese and South Korean leaders.
It will be Pompeo's first visit to North Korea since the June 12 summit
in Singapore between U.S. President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, at
which the North Korean leader agreed to "work toward denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula."
The joint summit statement, however, gave no details on how or when
Pyongyang might give up its weapons. U.S. officials have since been
trying to flesh out details to produce an agreement that might live up
to Trump's enthusiastic portrayal of the outcome.
The U.S. goal remained "the final, fully-verified denuclearization of
(North Korea), as agreed to by Chairman Kim in Singapore," a State
Department spokeswoman said.
A U.S. delegation led by U.S. ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim met
with North Korean counterparts at Panmunjom on the border between North
and South Korea on Sunday to discuss next steps on the implementation of
the summit declaration, the State Department said.
"We had good meetings yesterday and ... the secretary of state will be
there later this week to continue those discussions," Sanders told a
White House briefing.
Sanders endorsed comments made on Sunday by White House national
security adviser John Bolton, who said he believed the bulk of North
Korea's weapons programs could be dismantled within a year "if they have
the strategic decision already made to do that."
"There is great momentum right now for a positive change and we are
moving together for further negotiations," Sanders said.
However, some experts disputed Bolton's optimistic time frame for
decommissioning North Korea's weapons, even if North Korea were willing
to agree to such moves, amid multiple reports suggesting otherwise.
INTELLIGENCE REPORTS
An NBC News report on Friday quoted U.S. officials saying U.S.
intelligence agencies believe North Korea has increased production of
fuel for nuclear weapons at multiple secret sites in recent months and
may try to hide these while seeking concessions in talks with the United
States.
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks during a news conference
following a meeting with North Korea's envoy Kim Yong Chol in New
York, U.S., May 31, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
The Washington Post reported on Saturday that U.S. intelligence
officials had concluded that North Korea did not intend to fully
give up its nuclear arsenal and is considering ways to hide the
number of weapons it has.
Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey,
California, issued a report on Monday saying recent satellite
imagery showed North Korea was completing a major expansion of a key
manufacturing plant for solid-fuel missiles.
The images showed North Korea finishing construction on the exterior
of the plant around the time Kim was meeting with Trump, the report
said.
Last week, 38 North, a North Korea monitoring project affiliated
with Washington's Stimson Center think tank, said satellite imagery
showed the North had been upgrading its Yongbyon nuclear complex.
Bolton also refused to comment on intelligence matters, but said the
United States was going into nuclear negotiations aware of
Pyongyang's failure to live up to its past promises.
Patrick Cronin, senior director of the Asia-Pacific Security Program
at the Center for a New American Security, said U.S. and South Korea
officials had told him Pompeo would be seeking to agree to "a
specific denuclearization road map, or at least significant
dismantlement steps that could fill in a roadmap."
He said that if progress was made, the U.S. was open to expanded
future engagement with North Korea, including a possible visit by
Kim to the United Nations General Assembly in New York in September
and a second summit with Trump.
North Korea has consistently refused in past rounds of failed
negotiations to provide an inventory of its weapons program, and
U.S. intelligence remains uncertain of how many nuclear warheads
North Korea has.
The Defense Intelligence Agency has a high end estimate of about 50
nuclear warheads. But U.S. intelligence agencies believe Pyongyang
is concealing an unknown number, including smaller tactical nuclear
weapons, in caves and other underground facilities around the
country.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Writing by Mohammad Zargham; Editing by
Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)
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