A senior North Korean diplomat on Friday questioned the need to continue denuclearization talks with the United States, saying leader Kim Jong-un appears to be changing his mind as well.
In an interview with Yonhap News Agency and a few other South Korean news outlets here, Vice Foreign Minister Choe Son-hui claimed that her country should be rewarded adequately for more than a year of halts to nuclear and long-range missile testing: with the lifting of at least some U.N. sanctions.
(Yonhap)
"I (got) a feeling that (Chairman Kim) is changing his thought a bit" toward the negotiations with the U.S., Choe said. "It's my personal feeling."
Choe said her country has already taken a lot of goodwill measures.
Especially, she emphasized, her country has stayed away from nuclear and missile tests for 15 months.
A wide web of U.N. sanctions on North Korea is attributable to its repeated provocations earlier. And, according to Choe, related Security Council resolutions stipulate that those sanctions will be removed if Pyongyang does not continue such actions.
Still, amid the lack of any sign that the U.N. will lift the sanctions, the U.S. has gone too far toward the "reckless assertion" that North Korea should dismantle nuclear and missile facilities beyond a freeze of related activities, Choe said.
She accused the Trump administration of having moved the goal posts, saying it initially talked about dismantling the Yongbyon nuclear complex and is now taking issue with other sites as well.
The official said Kim had put forward his "best offer" of dismantling the Yongbyon facilities under the inspection of U.S. nuclear experts.
"The Yongbyon facilities, which we proposed (dismantling), are not trivial," she said. "In history, (North Korea) has never presented the entire nuclear facilities (in Yongbyon) as an object to be dismantled."
But the U.S. says it's not satisfied with Yongbyon for the removal of U.N. sanctions.
Choe said she also got the impression that Kim feels "very odd" about the U.S. way of bargaining and "calculating."
"We have lots of thinking about the U.S. response," she said.
Her remarks came amid concerns and doubts about the future of the denuclearization process after the Trump-Kim talks collapsed.
Publicly, the two sides said they remain committed to continued dialogue.
Choe's remarks were apparently aimed at putting pressure on Trump, who said he's in no rush for a nuclear deal.
She is a career diplomat, having long handled U.S.-related affairs at the foreign ministry. She participated in the six-party nuclear talks, which were last held in December 2008, as a member of North Korea's delegation. (Yonhap)
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