SEOUL: US President Donald Trump said he was prepared to meet North Korea’s Kim Jong-un in what would be the first face-to-face encounter between leaders from the two countries and could mark a breakthrough in a stand-off over the North’s nuclear weapons.
Kim had “committed to denuclearisation” and to suspending nuclear and missile tests, South Korea’s National Security Office head Chung Eui-yong said at the White House after briefing Trump on a meeting South Korean officials held with Kim earlier this week.
Kim and Trump had been engaging in an increasingly bellicose exchange of insults over the North’s nuclear and missile programmes, which it pursues in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions, before an easing of tension coinciding with last month’s Winter Olympics in the South.
“A meeting is being planned,” Trump said on Twitter after speaking to Chung, setting up what would be his biggest foreign policy gamble since taking office in January last year.
Chung said Trump agreed to meet by May in response to Kim’s invitation. A senior US official said it could happen “in a matter of a couple of months, with the exact timing and place still to be determined”.
Both Russia and China, who joined years of on-again, off-again “six-party” talks, along with the US, the two Koreas and Japan, aimed at ending the stand-off, welcomed the new, positive signals after months of deteriorating relations between North Korea and the US.
Trump has derided the North Korean leader as a “maniac”, referred to him as “little rocket man” and threatened in a speech to the UN last year to “totally destroy” Kim’s country of 26 million people if it attacked the US or one of its allies.
Kim responded by calling Trump a “mentally deranged US dotard”.
South Korean President Moon Jae-In, who led the pursuit of détente with North Korea during his country’s hosting of the Winter Olympics, said the summit would set a course for denuclearisation, according to a presidential spokesman. Trump had agreed to meet Kim without any preconditions, another South Korean official said.
“It’s good news, no doubt,” said Hong Chun-Uk, chief economist at Kiwoom Securities in Seoul. “But this will likely prove to be only a short-lived factor unless more and stronger actions follow.”
Trump had previously said he was willing to meet Kim under the right circumstances but said the time was not right for such talks. He mocked US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in October for “wasting his time” trying to talk to North Korea.
Tillerson said earlier on Thursday during a visit to Africa that although “talks about talks” might be possible with Pyongyang, denuclearisation negotiations were probably a long way off.
“Kim Jong-un talked about denuclearisation with the South Korean representatives, not just a freeze,” Trump said on Twitter on Thursday night. “Also, no missile testing by North Korea during this period of time. Great progress being made but sanctions will remain until an agreement is reached.”
A meeting between Kim and Trump would be a turnaround after a year in which North Korea has carried out a battery of tests aimed at developing a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting the US.