North Korea is threatening
to pull out of a historic summit with the United States and South Korea unless
its current terms are reviewed from their current “one-sided” affair, reports
say Wednesday.
The North said it was being
pressured to unilaterally give up its nuclear weapon without commensurate
concessions from the U.S., according to a statement by its First Vice Foreign
Minister Kim Kye, South Korean media reported.
The announcement came hours
after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un called off a high-level meeting with
South Korea.
President Donald Trump
recently announced that the three-way talks would hold in Singapore.
But Mr Kim Kye said a
recent statement by thee U.S. National Security Adviser, John Bolton, which
suggested that the North should follow the “Libyan model” of nuclear
disarmament and provide a “complete, verifiable and irreversible dismantlement”
was problematic.
“We will appropriately
respond to the Trump administration if it approaches the North Korea-US summit
meeting with a truthful intent to improve relations,” Mr Kim Kye said. “But we
are no longer interested in a negotiation that will be all about driving us
into a corner and making a one-sided demand for us to give up our nukes and
this would force us to reconsider whether we would accept the North Korea-US
summit meeting.”
Mr Trump did not respond to
requests from reporters on Tuesday about the development. He walked past
reporters at the White House lawn without responding to chants for his
immediate reaction.
The development is said to
have caught Mr Trump and other U.S. officials off-guard, according to CNN.
Some commentators said the
suggestion of Libya, which was compelled to dismantle its nuclear arsenal in
2003 before economic sanctions were later relaxed, could hinder progress in
negotiations with the North.

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