Are we back to 'Rocketman' vs 'Dotard'? 
  North Korea minister slams Mike Pence, adding more uncertainty to Trump-Kim summit   	 	    																 																	 			 							  						 			 			 			  			 						 			 														  																		- A high-ranking North Korean minister called  U.S. Vice President Mike Pence a "political dummy" for likening her  country to Libya just days after Pyongyang explicitly rejected all  comparisons to the North African state.
 - If Washington continues  to offends North Korea's goodwill, the country's Vice Minister of  Foreign Affairs Choe Son Hui said on Thursday that she will recommend  ruler Kim Jong Un to reconsider the June 12 summit with President Donald  Trump.
   																										    																  					  	  																																							 					    			    		 	    									 Nyshka Chandran													|  @nyshkac 																 					 							  			   	 		   		Published 7 Mins Ago 	 	CNBC.com  	  		Injecting greater uncertainty into the future of a  planned June 12 meeting between Washington and Pyongyang, a senior  minister from the rogue state has slammed Vice President  Mike Pence for comparing  North Korea to  Libya.
   															 																													 					 			 	 												    																  					  						 																							 			 			  			 																		  									 													   			    	       			    					 Lucas Jackson | Reuters U.S. Vice President Mike Pence speaks at a National Rifle Association (NRA) convention in Dallas, Texas, U.S. May 4, 2018.  			  																		Speaking in May 21 interview on Fox News, Pence said the reclusive regime could end up like the North African country "if  Kim Jong Un  doesn't make a deal." He also warned Kim that it would be a "great  mistake" to play Washington ahead of an anticipated meeting with  President  Donald Trump on June 12.
   															 																										    														In response, North Korean Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Choe Son Hui said  in a Thursday statement  carried by state-run news agency KCNA that "as a person involved in the  U.S. affairs, I cannot suppress my surprise at such ignorant and stupid  remarks gushing out from the mouth of the U.S. vice-president."
   															 																						 																			    														Pence's comments are seen as especially stinging to the North as they come just a few days after National Security Advisor  John Bolton got in trouble with Pyongyang for proposing  a Libya-style model of denuclearization.
   															 																										    														In an angry statement last week, Kim's administration  made clear that it rejects all comparisons to Libya, which voluntarily gave up its nuclear ambitions in 2003 in exchange for the removal of sanctions. The country's dictator  Moammar Gadhafi was eventually overthrown in a Western-supported coup and killed in 2011.
   															 																										    														"It will be proper for  [Pence] to know even a little bit about the current state of global  affairs and to sense to a certain degree the trends in dialogue and the  climate of détente," Choe said on Thursday, implying that the U.S.  politician should have refrained from Libya comparisons following  Bolton's episode.
   															 																										    																                                                                                                                                                                 		   		 			     				 				  	  				    	                              Prospects for US-North Korea summit are waning   			                        1 Hour Ago |  03:01	  					 					  						        								  																		Calling Pence a "political dummy," Choe went on to  say that Trump's second-in-command "should have seriously considered the  terrible consequences of his words."
   															 																										    																  					  												What this means for Trump-Kim summit 										 			 			 			  			 						 			 														  																		The development doesn't bode well for the historic  meeting, especially following potential signs of backtracking from both  Kim and Trump. The U.S. president, on Wednesday, warned  there was a "substantial" chance that the summit "may not work out" for June 12.
   															 																										    														If Washington continues  to offends North Korea's goodwill, Choe said on Thursday that she "will  put forward a suggestion to our supreme leadership for reconsidering the  DPRK-U.S. summit."
  It's significant that  U.S. officials continue to press the isolated state instead of taking a  more diplomatic approach ahead of June's tough negotiations, according  to experts.
   															 																										    														While Trump is known for  off-the-cuff remarks, "the fact that other senior figures in the White  House have made comments that risk overshadowing the summit indicates a  more far-reaching hard-line position toward the DPRK," said Anthony  Rinna, an analyst at research group SinoNK.
   															 																										    														With both parties so  close to the negotiating table, Bolton and Pence's comments indicate "a  lack of appreciation for how delicate the situation is and what's at stake," he continued: "The  White House may see an opportunity to push as hard and fast for a  favorable outcome as it can, yet the manner in which they are doing it  risks having the opposite effect."
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