US official: Trump wants solo\, not multi-party talks with NK

US official: Trump wants solo, not multi-party talks with NK

AP  |  Washington 

The U.S. has little interest in joining other in a multi-nation effort to get to give up its nuclear weapons, Donald Trump's said Sunday.

The is not trying to exclude other nations from nuclear talks with Pyongyang, told "Sunday," but "I think it's not what our preference is."

"I think Kim Jong Un, at least up until now, has wanted the one-on-one contact with the United States, which is what he has gotten," Bolton said, adding that Trump is open to possibility of a third summit with Kim.

Following their talks in on Thursday, suggested the revival of a multilateral approach to the denuclearization negotiations, which have failed in the past.

Putin said Kim is willing to give up nuclear weapons, but only if he gets ironclad security guarantees supported by a multinational agreement.

The U.S., North Korea, China, South Korea, and began so-called six-party negotiations in August 2003. accepted a deal in September 2005 to end its nuclear weapons program in exchange for security, economic and

But disagreements between and over financial sanctions imposed on the North temporarily derailed the six-nation talks before conducted its first nuclear test in October 2006.

The disarmament talks resumed a few weeks later and the six governments reached a deal in February 2007 where North Korea would receive an aid package worth about $400 million in return for disabling its nuclear facilities and allowing international inspectors to verify the process.

A final attempt to complete an agreement to fully dismantle North Korea's nuclear program fell through in December 2008 when the North refused to accept U.S.-proposed verification methods.

Trump's two high-profile meetings with Kim first in and then in late February in have yielded no denuclearization roadmap. In Russia, Kim strongly criticized for taking a "unilateral attitude in bad faith" in that he said caused the diplomatic standstill, North Korea's state-run Agency said Friday.

Bolton said Trump is still looking at the possibility of a third summit with Kim. "He feels pretty strongly about it," Bolton said. "He's said repeatedly he thinks he has a good relationship with and the six-party approach failed in the past." Bolton also said Trump also does not favor Kim's desire for a step-by-step approach to denuclearization where North Korea would get some sanctions relief in exchange for taking steps toward denuclearization. "I think if you look at the past policies, the answer to that is no," Bolton said.

"The past policies that have tried a step-by-step approach have all failed. Kim or his father have gotten economic relief and then somehow have never gotten around to that commitment to denuclearize.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 28 2019. 22:00 IST