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Trump’s team weighing direct talks with North Korea – Reuters

The initial goal is reportedly to reestablish basic engagement between Washington and Pyongyang

US President-elect Donald Trump’s team is contemplating direct talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in an effort to lower the risks of a potential armed conflict, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing sources.

The North Korean leader this month accused the US of fueling tension and provocations, claiming that by doing so, Washington is raising the risk of a nuclear war.

People familiar with the matter told the outlet that an initial goal would be to reestablish basic engagement and break the ice with Kim. However, no final decisions have been made by the president-elect, the sources said.

Last week, Trump named former State Department official Alex Wong – who was among those overseeing the North Korea strategy during his first administration – as deputy national security adviser.

At the start of his first presidency term, Trump mocked Kim by calling him “Little Rocket Man” and threatened to unleash “fire and fury” if North Korea continued its nuclear tests. The two leaders traded insults and what Trump called “beautiful” letters, in which Kim called Trump a “dotard.”

Between 2018 and 2019, they met three times – in Singapore, Hanoi, and in the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that divides the peninsula between North and South. The historic DMZ meeting marked the first time that a sitting US president had set foot in North Korea.

Trump described their talks as falling “in love,” although the negotiations failed to secure a denuclearization deal or sanctions relief.

Nonetheless, the diplomatic engagement between Trump and Kim facilitated a brief thaw on the Korean Peninsula, which has since been replaced with a period of hostility between the North and the South.

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The report pointed out that Kim ignored four years of outreach by the now-outgoing US President Joe Biden to start talks with no pre-conditions.

Under the Biden administration, Washington and Seoul have resumed joint military exercises. Pyongyang considers such drills a major security threat, arguing that they could be used to disguise preparations for an invasion.

At a defense expo in Pyongyang last week, Kim accused Washington of abusing its power by claiming a sphere of influence that covers the entire world, and of using military threats against dissenting nations, including North Korea.

“We have already explored every possible avenue in negotiating with the US,” Kim stated, adding that Washington’s “aggressive and hostile policy toward North Korea will never change.”

Trump said during his campaign that Kim “misses” him and implied the country would not be “acting up” when he returns to office.

North Korean state media responded over the summer by commenting that the country’s leaders “do not care” who takes office in the US. The reports signaled that Kim’s nuclear weapons policy will continue.

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