U.S. softens North Korea approach as
Pompeo prepares for more nuclear talks
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[July 05, 2018]
By David Brunnstrom, John Walcott and Hyonhee Shin
WASHINGTON/SEOUL (Reuters) - The United
States appears to have shelved an "all or nothing" approach to North
Korean denuclearization as U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo prepares
to head back to North Korea this week hoping to agree a roadmap for its
nuclear disarmament.
Pompeo will spend a day and a half in North Korea on Friday and Saturday
on what will be his third trip to the country this year, and his first
since an unprecedented summit between President Donald Trump and North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore on June 12.
It will be Pompeo's first overnight stop in the country, with which the
United States had remained technically at war since the 1950-53 Korean
War ended in an armistice not a peace treaty.
At the Singapore summit, Kim made a broad commitment to "work toward
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," but has made no mention of
how or when Pyongyang might give up a nuclear weapons program that
threatens the United States and its allies.
U.S. officials have since been trying to flesh out an agreement that
critics say is short on substance and map a route to a deal that might
live up to Trump's enthusiastic portrayal of the summit outcome.
But U.S. officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said there had
been no sign of a breakthrough and little progress toward even defining
the keys terms of any agreement.
What has been seen instead is an apparent softening in the Trump
administration's approach, in spite of what U.S. officials say are
intelligence assessments saying that North Korea is continuing to
deceive Washington about its weapons programs.
The U.S. administration has previously demanded that North Korea agree
to abandon its entire nuclear program before it could expect any relief
from tough international sanctions. Ahead of the Singapore summit,
Pompeo said Trump would reject anything short of "complete, verifiable
and irreversible denuclearization."
But following talks on Sunday between U.S. envoy Sung Kim and North
Korean counterparts to set up Pompeo's latest Pyongyang visit, this
"CVID" mantra appears suddenly to have disappeared from the U.S. State
Department lexicon.
It says pressure will remain until North Korea denuclearizes, but in
statements this week, has redefined the U.S. goal as "the final, fully
verified denuclearization of (North Korea) as agreed to by Chairman
Kim."
STEP BACK
Two U.S. officials said the Trump administration had stepped back from
its CVID demand on South Korea's advice.
The South Koreans, who have been pursuing their own talks with North
Korea, argued that step-by-step negotiations were more likely to be
successful than insisting Pyongyang yield to all U.S. demands before any
concessions.
There was also a realization, one official said, that maintaining
Chinese and Russian cooperation over North Korea would be “more
problematic if the U.S. stuck to an all-or-nothing posture.”
The official said that the North Koreans had largely refused in talks
with Sung Kim to respond to attempts to define the key terms of an
eventual agreement, including the words complete, verifiable and
irreversible.
“The choice was either bend it or break it,” one of the officials said.
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks during an event to unveil
the 2018 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report at the State Department
in Washington, U.S., June 28, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
A senior South Korean official told U.S. officials in a meeting in
Washington last month that the U.S. side should stop pressing for CVID,
which North Korea saw as a recipe for unilateral disarmament that would
leave it vulnerable to regime change, according to a source familiar
with the discussions.
The South Korean official suggested that the U.S. instead refer to
"mutual threat reduction," the source said.
The official also argued that it would be difficult to inspect North
Korean nuclear and missile facilities in a conventional way involving
"hundreds" of international investigators, as Pyongyang would be
unlikely to accept.
Patrick Cronin of the Center for a New American Security, an Asia expert
in close touch with U.S. and South Korean officials, said the thinking
seemed to be that although Kim would not want to give up his entire
nuclear program anytime soon, he might be willing to dismantle major
portions of it.
"The U.S. may be exploring the degree to which he will dismantle major
programs within the coming months, and if dropping some language to do
this is required, Washington seems willing to do that at this point," he
said.
"Because verified denuclearization of the main elements of a nuclear and
missile program is the best that can be hoped for, Washington has
quietly begun emphasizing final, fully verified denuclearization,” he
said.
"Ambiguity in language may open up space for agreement despite the fact
that interlocutors have different goals in mind. This is what is
occurring right now as Washington and Pyongyang engage in talks to
determine whether a workable deal is possible."
Daniel Russel, former President Barack Obama's top diplomat for East
Asia, said it seemed the administration felt obliged to back away from
tough positions after Trump's post-summit declaration that there was no
longer a nuclear threat from North Korea.
Russel said the "mutual threat reduction" approach pushed by Seoul
played into North Korea's hands "since Pyongyang’s strategy for
protecting its nuclear program is to hide behind a call for global
denuclearization while seeking payoffs for suspending its threatening
behavior."
White House national security adviser John Bolton said on Sunday 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."
However, on Tuesday, State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert
declined give a timeframe for North Korea's denuclearization.
"I know some individuals have given timelines; we're not going to
provide a timeline for that," she said. "A lot of work is left to be
done, certainly. We go into this eyes wide open."
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom, John Walcott and Daphne Psaledakis in
Washington and Hyonhee Shin in Seoul; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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