Connect with us

News

North Korea: US not adhering to its bargain since Trump-Kim summit

Published

on

Spread The News

North Korea issued a forceful statement Thursday against what it said were elements of the US government which are not adhering to the spirit of the dialogue established by US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the Singapore summit in June.

Pyongyang said while it had taken “such practical denuclearization steps as discontinuing nuclear test and ICBM test fire” and “broadminded measures” like the repatriation of US Korean War remains, “the US responded to our expectation by inciting international sanctions and pressure against (North Korea).”

The statement, credited to North Korea’s Foreign Ministry, notably did not blame Trump but singled out “some high-level officials within the US administration” who it said were going against the President’s will. It also echoed criticism of previous administrations’ approaches to North Korea that Trump himself has made.

The statement seems intended to hit a target audience in the US, being released in English by North Korea’s mission to the United Nations in New York, rather than just through the state-run Korean Central News Agency, the usual avenue for government announcements.

The statement was also published by KCNA.

Slow progress

North Korea’s criticism of the US comes after Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton said this week that the administration does not feel Pyongyang is living up to its end of the deal.

Bolton is a longtime Korea hawk and had been a critic of talking with North Korea before Trump opened diplomatic relations. Speaking to CNN on Monday, he said “we’re waiting for the North Koreans to begin the process of denuclearization, which they committed to in Singapore and which they’ve not yet done.”

His comments came as US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has been leading negotiations with North Korea and has traveled to Pyongyang multiple times, stressed the process will take time and is still in the early stages.

Trump and Kim exchanged letters this month, and Pompeo had a friendly exchange with North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho at last weekend’s ASEAN summit in Singapore.

Ri said Saturday that denuclearization by North Korea should happen “phase by phase,” and statement from the foreign minister posted in the media room at the ASEAN forum criticized the US for “raising its voice louder for maintaining the sanctions against (North Korea).”

For his part, Pompeo said last week North Korea was “closer” to denuclearization, but that “the ultimate timeline for denuclearization will be set by Chairman Kim, at least in part.”

‘Unchanged in our will’

The frustration expressed by North Korea points to a fundamental disagreement between the two parties as to the timeline and progress of implementing what was agreed by Kim and Trump.

North Korea has made clear it felt the Singapore summit was only a first step, and that its own concessions — such as freezing nuclear and missile tests and the returning of remains — should be reciprocated by the US in some manner.

Pyongyang believes there is a “strong possibility” of a second Kim-Trump summit, an official with close knowledge of North Korea’s position on the matter told CNN this week.

State-run media in North Korea has recently stepped up criticism of the US. An article Thursday in the Rodong Sinmun said a formal peace treaty ending the Korean War must take place before denuclearization.

North Korea has in the past expressed anger over comments made by administration officials in the media, especially Bolton. In May, an official statement said “we do not hide our feeling of repugnance towards” Bolton after he suggested Libya as a potential model for future North Korean denuclearization.

South Korea’s Presidential spokesman Kim Eui-keum said on Monday Seoul is “asking North Korea to speed up its denuclearization” and asking the US to “show sincere efforts about corresponding measures that North Korea is demanding.”

An official end to the Korean War was a key part of the Panmunjom Declaration signed by Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in in their historic summit in April, ahead of Trump and Kim’s meeting.

One of the goals of North Korea’s missile and nuclear program — which a confidential UN report recently said was still operational — is to defend itself from US aggression and attempted regime change.

Pyongyang has made clear it views a peace treaty and a security guarantee from the US that Washington will not attack it as a key step in the process towards full denuclearization, and Thursday’s statement appeared to express frustration at the lack of progress on these fronts.

“We remain unchanged in our will to uphold the intentions of the top leaders of (North Korea) and the US and to build trust and implement in good faith the (Trump-Kim) joint statement step by step,” it said. “The US should, even at this belated time, respond to our sincere efforts in a corresponding manner

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Trending