U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is interviewed by Maria Bartiromo during her 'Mornings with Maria Bartiromo' program on the Fox Business Network, in New York, April 5. AP |
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Friday that he is "confident" there will be a third nuclear summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on an as yet undetermined date.
During an interview with CBS News, Pompeo was asked whether there would be another meeting between the leaders after the second one in February collapsed without a deal.
"I'm confident there will be," he said, adding that he didn't know when it would happen but was hopeful it would be soon.
Pompeo said the two sides have been in contact since the last summit in Hanoi, Vietnam, which he said have led to a "deeper understanding" of each other's positions.
The summit broke down due to disagreements over the extent of North Korea's denuclearization and sanctions relief from the U.S.
"We have had conversations after Hanoi about how to move forward," Pompeo said.
President Moon Jae-in is due to hold talks with Trump in Washington, Thursday, to help restore momentum to the talks between the U.S. and the North.
Moon, who brokered the first Trump-Kim summit in Singapore in June, has been eager to resume inter-Korean economic projects, which currently risk running afoul of international sanctions against Pyongyang, in order to prompt the North to abandon its nuclear weapons program and bring lasting peace to the Korean Peninsula.
Pompeo made clear the U.S. has no plans to lift sanctions short of the North's denuclearization.
"President Trump has been unambiguous. Our administration's policy is incredibly clear: Economic sanctions, United Nations Security Council sanctions, will not be lifted until we achieve the ultimate objective that we set out now almost two years ago," he said.
But the secretary was vague when asked how Washington would respond to Seoul's wishes to reopen a joint industrial park in the North Korean border town of Gaeseong and resume tourism to the North's Mount Geumgang.
"I talk to my South Korean counterpart a lot. She's a delightful, capable minister for their country," Pompeo said of South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha, whom he met in Washington last week.
"They're neighbors with the North Koreans. Many South Koreans have family members there. I understand the sentiment, but they've been great partners, and we have worked closely together to enforce these sanctions. We appreciate what they're doing," he said.
The North Korean leader is expected to give a major policy speech Thursday to mark the first meeting of the newly elected deputies of the parliament.
"We'll watch very closely what he says," Pompeo said. "I don't expect there'll be great surprise, but I do hope that he will share his sentiment, his sentiment that says: I believe, as the leader of North Korea, I believe the right thing to do is for us to engage with the United States to denuclearize our country, and that we'll have a brighter future for the North Korean people." (Yonhap)