Remarks come after report stated North Korean officers refused to just accept letter from Trump to Kim.
United States President Donald Trump is “receptive” to dialogue with North Korean chief Kim Jong Un, the White Home has stated, after a South Korea-based information website reported that Pyongyang repeatedly rebuffed Trump’s outreach efforts.
White Home Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated on Wednesday that Trump wish to construct on the “progress” made throughout his 2018 summit with Kim.
The summit in Singapore marked the first-ever assembly between a sitting US president and the chief of North Korea, which has been dominated by the Kim dynasty for almost eight many years.
However whereas historic, the summit, which was adopted by conferences in Vietnam and on the Demilitarized Zone dividing North and South Korea, failed to attain Washington’s aim of halting the advance of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons programmes.
“The president stays receptive to correspondence with Kim Jong Un,” Leavitt advised reporters.
“As for particular correspondence, I’ll go away that to the president to reply,” Leavitt added.
Leavitt’s remarks got here in response to a query a few report in NK Information that stated North Korean diplomats in New York had repeatedly refused to just accept a letter from Trump to Kim.
Trump’s letter was aimed toward “reopening communication channels between Washington and Pyongyang”, Seoul-based NK Information reported, citing an “knowledgeable high-level supply”.
Trump’s reported outreach comes as South Korea’s newly elected president, Lee Jae-myung, is main Seoul to undertake a extra reconciliatory posture in direction of Pyongyang.
On Wednesday, South Korea switched off loudspeakers broadcasting Ok-pop and different propaganda throughout the inter-Korean border in one of many first strikes by Lee’s administration to decrease tensions between the perimeters.
South Korea’s Ministry of Nationwide Defence stated the transfer would assist to “restore belief in inter-Korean relations” and “promote peace on the Korean Peninsula”.
North and South Korea stay technically at struggle after hostilities within the 1950-1953 Korean Battle ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.