Trump administration makes new effort to 'reach out to the North Koreans,' report says
The Trump administration has “reached out to the North Koreans”
to ask them to resume diplomacy since the two sides broke off talks
last October, White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien told
Axios Sunday. "We've reached out to the North Koreans and let them
know that we would like to continue the negotiations in Stockholm that
were last undertaken in early October,” he told the news service. O’Brien
expressed cautious optimism North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un hasn't yet
delivered his promised "Christmas gift" — something many analysts
expected would be a nuclear weapons test, Axios reported. President
Trump is hoping to build on inroads he’s made to restart the talks and
reach an agreement with the North, the report said. Trump recently sent a
birthday message to Kim, but the North Koreans have
already said Trump's courtship will not change their policy. To
date, Trump's diplomacy has yielded little results besides giving Kim
more time to expand his nuclear arsenal, according to analysts tracking
North Korea's supply of nuclear warheads.
US President Donald Trump(L)speaks next to new national security
advisor Robert O'Brien on September 18, 2019 at Los Angeles
International Airport in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Nicholas
Kamm / AFP via Getty Images)
John Bolton, O'Brien's predecessor as national
security adviser, recently told Axios the administration is bluffing
about stopping North Korea's nuclear ambitions and should prepare to
make a public admission its policy failed badly.
O'Brien said
he remains hopeful about Kim's decision — so far — to refrain from
launching a nuclear test during the Christmas and New Year timeframe.
Kim
"promised to send a Christmas present. The president suggested he send
him a vase. We didn't get a vase or any other sort of Christmas gift.
That appears to be positive," O’Brien told Axios. "All
we know is we were told we were going to get a Christmas gift and the
Christmas gift didn't come. And so I think that was an encouraging sign.
But, again, that doesn't mean we won't see some sort of test in the
future," O'Brien added.
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