Seoul: North Korea and the United States have agreed to resume nuclear negotiations, October 5 following a months-long stalemate over withdrawal of sanctions in exchange for disarmament, a senior North Korean diplomat said Tuesday.
Choe Son Hui, North Korea’s first vice-minister of foreign affairs, said the two nations will have preliminary contact October 4 before holding working-level talks, the next day.
In a statement released by North Korea’s official ‘Korean Central News Agency’, Choe expressed optimism over the outcome of the meeting but did not say where it would take place.
“It is my expectation that the working-level negotiations would accelerate the positive development of the DPRK-US relations,” Choe said in the statement, using an abbreviation for North Korea’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
Nuclear negotiations have been at a standstill for months following a February summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump in Hanoi, Vietnam. Those talks broke down after the US rejected North Korean demands for broad sanctions relief in exchange for partially surrendering its nuclear capabilities.
North Korea followed the summit with belligerent rhetoric and a slew of short-range weapons tests that were widely seen as an attempt to gain leverage ahead of a possible resumption of negotiations.
Choe’s announcement came after North Korea praised Donald Trump last month for suggesting that Washington may pursue an unspecified ‘new method’ in nuclear negotiations with the North. The country also welcomed Trump’s decision to fire hawkish former National Security Adviser John Bolton, who advocated a ‘Libya model’ of unilateral denuclearization as a template for North Korea.
AP