Trump agrees to meet with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, South Korea says
South Korean National Security Advisor Chung Eui-yong briefs reporters outside the West Wing of the White House Thursday.
MANDEL NGAN, AFP/Getty Images
Chung met with Kim earlier this week, and came to Washington Thursday to relay the message from the North Korean leader.
"I explained to President Trump that his leadership, and his maximum pressure policy, along with international solidarity, brought us to this juncture," he said.
The Trump administration has rallied the United Nations to impose ever-tightening sanctions against North Korea following a battery of missile tests.
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump would accept the invitation to meet Kim "at a place and time to be determined." But she added: "In the meantime, all sanctions and maximum pressure must remain.”
Trump claimed a diplomatic victory Thursday, telling ABC News, "Hopefully, you will give me credit."
Hours earlier, Trump hinted at the news in an unexpected — and unprecedented — visit to the White House briefing room, calling it a "major announcement" about a "big subject."
Experts greeted the news with a mix of optimism and skepticism.
"You know what, it’s a Hail Mary, but why not? Crazier things have happened in world history," said Harry Kazianis of the Director of Defense Studies, a think tank founded by President Richard Nixon. "Give peace a chance."
But Kazianis cautioned that Trump has to be careful not to give Kim any concessions. "You cant give Kim Jong Un the photo op he wants to legitimize him," he said. "You cannot legitimize a county that has more than 100,000 people in what are essentially Nazi-style gulag camps."
And Mark Dubowitz of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies cautioned that North Korea has yet to prove it's serious about abandoning its nuclear ambitions.
"The challenge is that the North Korea regime is a global champion, along with the Iranian regime, in playing us as fools," he said.
The surprise development follows several weeks of thawing relations between North and South Korea, prompted by the North's participation in the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang under a unified banner.
South Korean President Moon Jae-In sent Chung to North Korea this week as part of the highest-level talks in a decade.
Those talks were seen as a first step toward normalization of relations between the two countries, which have been divided since the 1953 armistice that ended the Korean war.
At a Tuesday press conference, Trump appeared to warm to the idea of talks with North Korea, which he had previously dismissed as "a waste of time."
"I think that they are sincere," he said of North Korea's desire for talks. "I hope they're sincere. We're going to soon find out."
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