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Still a way to go on DPRK, says Pompeo

By AFP
August 04, 2018

SINGAPORE: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo admitted on Friday there was still "a ways to go" on North Korea as Washington seeks to push Pyongyang to move faster along the path towards denuclearisation.

At his landmark summit with President Donald Trump in June, the North´s leader Kim Jong Un signed up to a vague commitment to "denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula" -- a far cry from long-standing US demands for complete, verifiable and irreversible disarmament.

And when Pompeo met with North Korean officials in Pyongyang last month to flesh out the regime´s commitment, they condemned his "gangster-like" insistence that the North move towards unilateral disarmament.

Arriving in Singapore ahead of a security forum, Pompeo said that "we can see we still have a ways to go to achieve the ultimate outcome we´re looking" for regarding North Korea. His North Korean counterpart, Ri Yong Ho, is also attending Saturday´s Asean Regional Forum although it is not yet clear whether the pair will meet on the sidelines.

While there have been small signs of progress since the summit, news reports indicate Pyongyang is continuing to build rockets and there have been concerns that the enforcement of United Nations sanctions on the North is being relaxed by some member states.

At the forum and in meetings on the sidelines, Pompeo is expected to push key powers involved in efforts to curtail the North´s nuclear ambitions to keep up sanctions pressure.

The annual forum, hosted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), brings together top diplomats from 26 countries and the European Union for talks on political and security issues in Asia-Pacific.

The foreign ministers from all nations involved in stalled "six-party" negotiations with North Korea aimed at reining in Pyongyang´s nuclear programme will be at the gathering: the US, China, Russia, Japan and South Korea.

Cutting off oil and fuel to the North would require enforcement primarily by China, which supplies most of North Korea´s energy needs, but also by Russia, which delivers some oil to Pyongyang. Pompeo met Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi Friday for talks.