North Korea Calls Drumpf Talks ‘Regrettable’

[SIZE=7]North Korea Calls Talks ‘Regrettable’ After U.S. Says Progress Was Made[/SIZE]
The two sides offered mixed messages on North Korean denuclearization.

https://img.huffingtonpost.com/asset/5b40c5ca2000004200b96634.jpeg?cache=ehviodzip6&ops=scalefit_630_noupscale
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives at Haneda Airport in Tokyo on July 7, 2018. (ANDREW HARNIK via Getty Images)

North Korea called denuclearization talks with the U.S. “regrettable” on Saturday, hours after U.S. delegation head Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told reporters progress had been made on key issues.

The Associated Press reported that a statement by the country’s official KCNA news agency accuses the U.S. of betraying the spirit of the historic June 12 summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump. Americans, the North said, pushed a “unilateral and gangster-like demand for denuclearization” over the two days of talks in Pyongyang, The New York Times reported.

The isolated nation said it might now waver in its “firm, steadfast” resolution to give up its nuclear program.

Pompeo had previously offered a more optimistic view of the talks, which were held with top North Korean party official and former spy chief Kim Yong Chol.
“These are complicated issues, but we made progress on almost all of the central issues,” Pompeo said before boarding a plane to depart North Korea, according to a pool report. “Some places a great deal of progress, other places there’s still more work to be done."

The U.S. envoy did not meet with North Korea’s leader during this round of talks, but the U.S. State Department said he arrived bearing a letter from Trump addressed to Kim Jong Un.

The two sides touched on methods of destroying a missile engine testing facility, as well as a general denuclearization timeline and the repatriation of American remains from the Korean War, Reuters reported.

For the U.S., the path to denuclearization would require North Korea to expose and dismantle its weapons sites, then allow outside inspectors to confirm that those actions had indeed taken place. Yet many observers are skeptical of the country’s commitment to dismantling its nuclear program. Multiple reports indicated that North Korea has actually increased its production of nuclear materials and made attempts to conceal such weaponry in recent weeks.

Pompeo said North Korean leadership remained “equally committed” to the goal of denuclearization discussed with Trump during last month’s historic summit in Singapore

He noted, however, that “there are things that I have to clarify,” Reuters reported. Kim responded that “there are things that I have to clarify as well.”

The American envoy stopped in Tokyo on Saturday before journeying home.

Drumpf will soon learn that things do not work the way they did on exploitative TV shows in which he ordered everybody around. He has walls to build, ‘easy’ trade-wars to win, and now to contend with a Pyongyang that is as slippery as its leader’s heavily pomaded hair.

Kassin, The “historic summit” was a ruse as was immediately evident (showing off the Beast, exchanging cd’s). A real dog and pony show to get himself in the history books. I’m not just being cynical, this hombre is that daft.

[SIZE=7]Inside Pompeo’s Fraught North Korea Trip[/SIZE]
By
Nick Wadhams
July 8, 2018, 8:48 AM EDT
[ul]
[li]Secretary of state struggled for clarity on visit’s schedule[/li][li]Regime issued harsh statement after Pompeo left country[/li][/ul]
As U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo touched down in Pyongyang at 10:54 a.m. on Friday he had few details of his schedule in the North Korean capital – even which hotel he and his staff would stay in.
Not much was clear aside from lunch with counterpart Kim Yong Chol to start filling in the “nitty-gritty details’’ from the Singapore declaration signed between the leaders of the U.S. and North Korea, according to his spokeswoman Heather Nauert. A handshake with Kim Jong Un, at least, seemed certain.

In the end, Pompeo stayed at neither of the hotels where he thought he’d be. The North Koreans took him, his staff and the six journalists traveling with the delegation to a gated guesthouse on the outskirts of the capital, just behind the mausoleum where the bodies of regime founder Kim Il Sung and his son Kim Jong Il lie embalmed and on occasional display.

It was the start of a confused visit of less than 30 hours, marked by a pair of lavish banquets that the secretary and his staff appeared to dread for their length and the daunting number of courses presented by unfailingly polite waiters. He only learned of his own schedule hours ahead of time, and the meeting with Kim Jong Un never happened – despite strenuous efforts from his staff.

The trip reflects the difficulty for Pompeo in dealing with one of the world’s most reclusive and unpredictable regimes, which can shift from threats to warm words and back again at speed. It comes as pressure mounts on him to show progress on the delicate task of getting North Korea to move forward on nuclear disarmament, including the issue of verification, and make good on President Donald Trump’s claimed accomplishments from the Singapore summit.
Amid talk of goodwill and Trump’s repeated tweets of the bond he has developed with Kim, it was also a jarring reminder that North Korea’s approach may not have changed as much as U.S. officials – and Pompeo in particular – had hoped. The U.S. is seeking to persuade the world the North Koreans are genuinely prepared to give up the weapons they have developed in the face of years of false starts and broken promises to successive U.S. administrations.
From the moment Pompeo landed in Pyongyang, North Korean officials quickly asserted control. Kim Yong Chol set the optics during their first meeting, which took place around a long wooden table in one of the many conference rooms off the carpeted hallways of the guesthouse complex.

Normally, media handlers from the host country would let reporters witness the first 30 seconds or so of such a meeting. But Kim’s staff allowed reporters to stay for several minutes.
“The more you come, the more trust we can build between one another,” Kim said.
Pompeo, who has yet to gain a taste for such theater, murmured a few pleasantries but quickly lost patience and called on Nauert to usher all media – North Korean reporters included – from the room.
Between the many hours of talks, the North Koreans sought to put forward an image of bounty and wealth, an alternate reality in a country where much of the population lives in hunger, lacks electricity and has little to no access to the internet or foreign television.
[SIZE=5]Bearing Fruit[/SIZE]
In the guesthouse, each room had bowls of bananas, grapes, oranges and pears that were replenished whenever the occupant was out. The internet speed was fast in each room and the BBC played on flat-screen televisions. In a country laden with the iconography of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, there were no portraits of either man in the compound.
Still, the reminders were there. Guests could roam the grounds and walk a path that surrounded a lake, but were blocked from approaching workers erecting a building nearby. Guards watched surreptitiously from behind a stand of trees.
The lack of U.S. control clearly rankled Pompeo. A former military officer accustomed to short, focused meetings, he was made to sit through multi-course meals with Kim and his staff, as waiters brought plate after plate of food – foie gras, turkey, pea soup, boiled oak mushrooms, kimchi, watermelon and ice cream, plus a drink branded “American Cola.”
By the morning of his second day, Pompeo had enough. Instead of the elaborate breakfast prepared for him, he ate toast and slices of processed cheese.
Despite the lack of progress, the North Koreans showed a keen awareness of broader politics in the U.S. under Trump. On the way from the airport, riding in a Dodge Ram van, a minder was noncommittal about what the talks might bring.
“We’ll have to see, like your president says,” he said. He paused and added: “In this van, no fake news?”
The specifics of what happened behind closed doors remain unclear. Whether Pompeo somehow annoyed his counterpart, or pressed too hard, or whether the North Koreans are simply reverting to their hot-and-cold tactics, is hard to say. But the regime made sure to have the final word, and it was not pleasant.
As he was leaving, Pompeo told reporters the conversations were “productive and in good faith.” Hours later North Korean state media issued a statement that did not mention him by name but called the demands he presented “gangster-like.”
Days before the trip began, reporters traveling with Pompeo had to rush to get new passports with a special endorsement allowing entry to North Korea. In the end, authorities in Pyongyang never stamped them and the documents were returned unblemished. It was as if the secretary had never visited at all.

Watajua hawajui…Ex US military, gung-ho ugly American approach, that works like a red banner in front of an angry steer. I can imagine that Pompeo would start trying to drive the discussions and ignoring the Eastern etiquette of never initiating business during the informal moments. FAIL!!

If he continues to be stonewalled like this, Drumpf will probably blame him and fire him.

What a humiliation. The Americans are not used to this kind of treatment.
North Korea 1 - 0 USA