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To: Bonefish who wrote (1077718)7/12/2018 10:28:43 AM
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BREAKING...clown POS trump LIED yet again...Pompeo's North Korea meeting went 'as badly as it could have gone'
By Jamie Tarabay, CNN
Updated 1118 GMT (1918 HKT) July 11, 2018
edition.cnn.com

(CNN)It began with great expectations, an eagerly-anticipated meeting with a reclusive leader, and a gift bag that included an Elton John CD.

It ended with a scuttled rendezvous, statements declaring disappointment and stalemate.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's overnight visit to Pyongyang last week failed to demonstrate any progress on denuclearization talks, leading one source with knowledge of the discussions to say the White House felt it went "as badly as it could have gone."

"The North Koreans were just messing around, not serious about moving forward," the source told CNN's Michelle Kosinski, adding that Pompeo had been promised a meeting with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, and so not getting that meeting sent a big message.
"By now it's abundantly clear that this approach is a dead end," said Adam Mount, a senior fellow and director of the Defense Posture Project at the Federation of American Scientists, where he covers US nuclear strategy, deterrence and North Korea.

"The White House has essentially tried to shoot for the moon and total disarmament, and it's clear that North Korea is not only not willing to do that, but sees very little reason to take steps in that direction," he told CNN.
A gulf does exist
Pompeo himself sought to mitigate any frustration that North Korea has still not publicly declared what it will or will not do in regards to its own nuclear weapons program.
Speaking to reporters Wednesday as he arrived in Brussels to attend the NATO summit with President Donald Trump, Pompeo said the road ahead was long and that it was on the North Koreans for change to occur.
"Look, this is a decades-long challenge, getting the North Koreans to make a fundamental strategic decision, which is that the nuclear weapons they possess today frankly present a threat to them and not security," Pompeo said.
"We have to get the entire country to understand that they have that strategically wrong. Chairman Kim told President Trump he understood that. I was there. I saw it," he said.



Play Video

Pompeo dismisses North Korea's 'gangster' comments 00:40

While Pompeo declared the two sides were making progress, North Korea labeled the Americans' attitude as "regrettable" and said it differed from the spirit that buoyed both leaders when they met in Singapore on June 12.
"We expected the US to bring constructive measures to build confidence in accordance with the spirit of the US-NK summit," said a statement from state-run news agency KCNA. "However, the attitude of the US in the first high-level talks held on the 6th and 7th was indeed regrettable."
The comments showed "the gulf that does exist between the demands the United States and other nations are making and what North Korea is willing to do," said Australian Senator Penny Wong. She spoke to Australia's ABC radio from Washington, DC.
"That is why it is so important that we agree that ... it is so important to continue the economic pressure through the sanctions regime," she said.
Maximum leverage is gone
But the ship of maximum leverage has sailed, argues Cheon Seong Whun, a former South Korean government official who worked in the defense and unification departments. It left, he says, the moment President Trump agreed to meet with Kim Jong Un without any preconditions.
"He lost leverage when he agreed to those talks," said Cheon, a visiting research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies. "That was a huge political mistake."
The theater behind the failed Pompeo visit was "a repeated strategy by the North Koreans," he said, dubbing it a repeat of US-DPRK talks during the 1990s.
"The North Koreans have a very correct understanding of weak spots in Western politicians who try to make a deal with them. The politicians have to sound optimistic. Pompeo is not prepared to admit he made a mistake," Cheon told CNN.



Play Video

Trump-Kim summit: the road ahead 05:31

The White House has maintained that should North Korea fail to live up to its end of any bargain, sanctions will continue. But sanctions the Chinese government had previously enacted have loosened somewhat, says Adam Mount.
"Those other points of leverage are gone, the sanctions regime is gone, it won't come back. It will never be reconstituted at the level it once was, the Chinese are already easing enforcement and Trump has not maintained his relationship with China," Mount said.
"The maximum point in American leverage was before the president accepted the North Koreans' offer to meet. As soon as he did that, it's been downhill since."
Personal appeals to Trump
But one disappointing summit does not mean an end to diplomacy. The North Koreans demonstrated their determination to continue with the talks by appealing directly to Trump in the statement they issued that criticized his top diplomat.
"Should the headwind begin to blow, it would cause great disappointment not only to the international society aspiring after global peace and security, but also to both the DPRK and the U.S.," said the statement quoting a spokesman of the Ministry of the Foreign Affairs of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on Saturday.
"If so, this will finally make each side seek another choice, and there is no guarantee this will not result in yet another tragedy. We still cherish our good faith in President Trump," the statement said.
Two days later, Trump returned the compliment.
"I have confidence that Kim Jong Un will honor the contract we signed &, even more importantly, our handshake," he tweeted the following Monday. "We agreed to the denuclearization of North Korea. China, on the other hand, may be exerting negative pressure on a deal because of our posture on Chinese Trade-Hope Not!"



Play Video

Trump: Kim changed attitude after chat with Xi 01:02

The question for the administration now is whether it shifts to a "more feasible approach" rather than continuing to demand all-out disarmament from North Korea without any economic concessions, says Adam Mount.
"This approach is clearly a dead end. There are no indications that North Korea is interested in returning to the world of 'fire and fury'," Mount said, referring to the increasing tensions last year that prompted fears of military action from either side.
"The concern now is the president's reaction. Will he calculate that he stands to gain more domestically with returning to threats? Does he want to distract from domestic political or legal problems? All of those things could have volatile results."

CNN's Michelle Kosinski contributed to this report



To: Bonefish who wrote (1077718)7/12/2018 10:32:49 AM
From: sylvester802 Recommendations

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LIAR POS trump LOSING..North Koreans Are No-Shows at Meeting to Discuss U.S. Soldiers’ Remains
By Choe Sang-Hun
July 12, 2018
nytimes.com
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean officials did not show up on Thursday for a meeting with Americans at the inter-Korean border to discuss the return of remains of United States soldiers killed in the Korean War, officials said.

Kim Jong-un, the North’s leader, committed to repatriating American soldiers’ remains in his June talks with President Trump. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week, after meeting with officials in North Korea, that working-level talks on the matter would be held on or around Thursday in Panmunjom, the so-called truce village on the border between North and South Korea.

Though American military officials went to Panmunjom for the meeting on Thursday, their North Korean counterparts did not, according to a United States defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. A South Korean government official, who also asked for anonymity, confirmed that the North Koreans had not shown up at Panmunjom.

It was not clear whether the Americans had been deliberately stood up. Mr. Pompeo had cautioned that the date for the planned meeting at Panmunjom “could move by one day or two,” indicating that the two sides had not settled all the details before he left Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, on Saturday.

Mr. Pompeo said his discussions in Pyongyang had been productive, though he left without a North Korean agreement to take specific steps toward dismantling its nuclear weapons program. North Korea later said it was seriously disappointed by Mr. Pompeo’s visit, accusing him of making a “ unilateral and gangster-like demand for denuclearization,” while failing to offer corresponding American incentives to improve ties between the two countries.

North Korea has returned the remains of some American soldiers to the United States over the years since 1953, when an armistice halted the Korean War. But about 5,300 Americans presumed to have been killed in the North are still unaccounted for.

When Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim held their historic summit meeting in Singapore on June 12, Mr. Kim — in addition to promising, in vague terms, to work toward the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula — committed to returning the remains of American troops recovered from major Korean War battle sites in his country, including the “immediate repatriation of those already identified.”

North Korea was expected to hand over those remains — believed to belong to some 200 to 250 American servicemen — in the weeks following the meeting. The United States military has already moved coffins and American flags to Panmunjom in anticipation of receiving the remains.

Mr. Trump said last month that the North Koreans had “already sent back, or are in the process of sending back, the remains of our great heroes.” But the repatriation has yet to happen.

The Pentagon’s effort to find and bring home the long-lost American servicemen has been continually stymied by political tensions over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs. The repatriation under discussion now would be the first since the work of American military experts and North Korean workers from 1996 to 2005 who recovered remains believed to be those of more than 220 American soldiers.

Those recovery efforts were suspended in 2005, when the relationship between the two nations worsened over the North’s nuclear weapons program and the Pentagon became concerned about the safety of its search teams.

Even with the full cooperation of the North, recovery efforts are likely to take years. Remains brought to South Korea would then be transferred to Hawaii, where painstaking forensic work would be carried out to identify them.



To: Bonefish who wrote (1077718)7/12/2018 10:40:05 AM
From: sylvester802 Recommendations

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Clown POS trump... World's biggest clown... congrats....