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US, China agree to keep pressure on North Korea
By Andrew BEATTY
Washington (AFP) March 10, 2018

N.Korean minister 'to visit Sweden' ahead of Trump-Kim talks
Stockholm (AFP) March 9, 2018 - North Korea's foreign minister will visit Sweden soon, local media reported Friday, after US President Donald Trump and the North's leader Kim Jong Un agreed to meet to discuss Pyongyang's nuclear and missile tests.

Ri Yong Ho is expected to meet Swedish counterpart Margot Wallstrom "in the near future", diplomatic sources told the daily Dagens Nyheter, without specifying what they would discuss.

Contacted by AFP, the Swedish foreign ministry refused to comment.

The report comes after Trump floored his own advisors when he agreed to accept an offer to meet nuclear-armed dictator Kim before the end of May.

One issue to be resolved is where those talks will take place.

Sweden's embassy in Pyongyang represents US, Canadian and Australian diplomatic interests in North Korea and plays a key role in liaising diplomatic talks.

Trump thanked Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven for Stockholm's efforts to negotiate the release of US student Otto Warmbier, who was arrested for stealing propaganda material during a 2016 trip to Pyongyang and later died when he returned to his country.

Washington has long insisted that it will not allow Pyongyang to continue building and testing a nuclear arsenal. Kim's regime boasts it is now capable of delivering thermonuclear warheads to US cities.

UN chief says planned US-NKorea summit shows vision
United Nations, United States (AFP) March 9, 2018 - UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday welcomed the announcement of a planned summit between the United States and North Korea, saying the breakthrough showed "leadership and vision."

Guterres has repeatedly called for talks to address the crisis over North Korea's nuclear and missile tests, which the UN chief has described as the most pressing global security threat.

President Donald Trump agreed on Thursday to a first face-to-face meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, which could take place by the end of May.

Guterres "is encouraged by the announcement of an agreement" to hold a summit meeting, said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

"He commends the leadership and vision of all concerned," he added.

In December, Guterres dispatched his political chief, Jeffrey Feltman, to Pyongyang to urge North Korea to open a dialogue on ending the crisis.

Feltman, however, was then told by Pyongyang that "now was not the time" for talks, even if the North Korean officials agreed it was important to avoid war.

The UN Security Council has imposed tough economic sanctions aimed at choking off revenue to Pyongyang's military programs after Kim's regime carried out a sixth nuclear test and a series of advanced missile launches.

China -- Pyongyang's sole ally -- and Russia argue that sanctions alone will not push North Korea to change course and have repeatedly called for stepping up diplomatic efforts to achieve a solution.

Donald Trump enlisted Friday the help of China's Xi Jinping to keep sanctions pressure on North Korea, amid fears that an audacious diplomatic gambit by the US president could lead to backsliding.

In an evening tweet, Trump praised a possible future agreement with the communist North as "very good" for the international community as a whole, after the US leader stunned the world by accepting an invitation to meet Kim Jong Un before the end of May.

"The deal with North Korea is very much in the making and will be, if completed, a very good one for the World. Time and place to be determined," Trump wrote.

During a telephone conversation, Trump and the ever-more-powerful Chinese president committed to "maintain pressure and sanctions until North Korea takes tangible steps toward complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization," according to the White House.

As aides scrambled to catch up with Trump's decision -- taken before consulting key confidantes -- the White House sent mixed messages about conditions.

"They've made promises to denuclearize, they've made promises to stop nuclear and missile testing," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

"We're not going to have this meeting take place until we see concrete actions that match the words and the rhetoric of North Korea," she told reporters.

Officials behind the scenes said this did not constitute a change of heart.

A day after the bombshell announcement that the US and North Korean leaders would meet, Vice President Mike Pence said the White House would keep "maximum pressure" on Pyongyang and claimed US efforts to isolate Kim had been vindicated.

There has been limited reaction from Kim's regime, but South Korean President Moon Jae-in said news of the summit -- announced by his national security advisor on a visit to Washington -- was "like a miracle."

For his part, Xi urged the two leaders to begin talks as "soon as possible" and praised Trump's "positive aspiration."

China has long been North Korea's most important ally but has been on board with the sanctions agreed at the United Nations.

A cryptic report by South Korean news agency Yonhap said the South's envoys also delivered a "special message" to Trump from Kim during their US trip, but did not elaborate on what was said.

- 'Huge gamble' -

The UN Security Council has imposed tough economic sanctions aimed at choking off revenue to Pyongyang's military programs after Kim's regime carried out a sixth nuclear test and advanced missile launches.

China and Russia argue that sanctions alone will not push North Korea to change course and have repeatedly called for stepping up diplomatic efforts to achieve a solution.

The summit announcement triggered a rise in global stock markets while world leaders voiced hope the meeting would deflate tensions that had been building dramatically in recent months.

Some observers questioned the US president's wisdom in granting Kim a long-standing wish for a meeting after only agreeing to temporarily halt nuclear tests.

Bill Richardson, a former US ambassador to the United Nations who has negotiated with and traveled to the North, told AFP it was a bold move that is "worth taking" but also a "huge gamble".

"This is not 'The Apprentice' or a reality TV event... It's a negotiation with an unpredictable leader who has at least 20 nuclear weapons and who threatens the United States," he said.

Republican Senator Cory Gardner said America's approach to North Korea still needs not just a drop "but a whole bucket of reality."

"There is no greater diplomatic tool or lever than the President of the United States," he added. "If this doesn't succeed how much is left of that diplomatic runway is a very good question."

- 'Little Rocket Man' -

Trump has previously ridiculed Kim as "Little Rocket Man," imposing wide-ranging bilateral sanctions on the Pyongyang regime and also leading a drive for international sanctions through the UN. Pyongyang has hit back by calling Trump a "dotard".

Pence stressed that the White House has made "zero concessions" to get Kim to the table and emphasized that the sanctions would remain in place.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel was among the world leaders to hail the announcement as a "glimmer of hope," saying North Korea's nuclear drive "has been a source of great concern for all of us."

The International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN's nuclear watchdog, voiced hope the summit would produce "concrete progress" and a resumption of long-suspended nuclear inspections.

Pyongyang's long race to develop a nuclear weapon capable of reaching the United States has proved a problem for successive US administrations.

But the alarm bells have been ringing even louder since July, when Pyongyang conducted two intercontinental ballistic missile tests, declaring the entire United States now within range.

Trump threatened "fire and fury" if Pyongyang continued to threaten the United States, only for North Korea to carry out its sixth nuclear test.

The US and North Korea fought on opposite sides of a war in the 1950s, and in the last two decades have been engaged in perhaps the world's most dangerous nuclear standoff, with 30,000 US military personnel stationed just over the border in the South.


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NUKEWARS
US intelligence chief 'skeptical' on NKorea talks offer
Washington (AFP) March 6, 2018
The top US intelligence official said Tuesday that he remains doubtful about an apparent new overture from North Korea to enter into talks on its nuclear capability. "I'm quite skeptical about all of this," said Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats after Seoul announced that Pyongyang was willing to discuss giving up its nuclear weapons for American security guarantees. "Maybe this is a breakthrough. I seriously doubt it. As I said, hope springs eternal," Coats told a hearing of the Senat ... read more

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