
The Trump administration is considering a nuclear deal with North Korea that would ask it to freeze its nuclear weapons program, dropping prior demands to dismantle it entirely, The New York Times reported Sunday.
According to the report, White House officials are weighing a deal that would see leave North Korea's existing nuclear arsenal and missile battery in place - a situation that US policy has long said is intolerable.
A spokesman for the US State Department denied that such a proposal was being considered.The deal, according to the Times, would be "one that essentially enshrines the status quo, and tacitly accepts the North as a nuclear power, something administration officials have often said they would never stand for."
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business insider.
The State Department's envoy to North Korea, Stephen E. Biegun, told the Times that its account is "pure speculation" and that his team was "not preparing any new proposal currently."
"What is accurate is not new, and what is new is not accurate," he said.
On Sunday, Trump took part in a historic meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, becoming the first US president to enter North Korean territory.
Despite a series of high-profile summits with Kim, Trump's discussions with his counterpart have been short on results. Talks between the leaders in Vietnam in February broke down after Kim reportedly demanded an end to US sanctions.At Sunday's meeting, the two agreed to resume negotiations.

Critics have accused Trump of helping to legitimize Kim's brutal regime on the international stage with little to show in return.
Observers say he is under pressure to get results from his discussions with Kim, and a nuclear freeze would likely be easier to negotiate.
If the nuclear freeze deal is settled on, it would mark a dramatic departure from longstanding US commitment to its policy of North Korea's "Complete Verifiable Irreversible Denuclearization," sometimes shortened to CVID.
Under CVID North Korea is required to totally dissemble its nuclear arsenal and allow international inspectors to check its nuclear sites to make sure it is sticking to the deal.
The new nuclear freeze deal would be similar to the 1994 Agreed Framework deal negotiated between former North Korean leader Kim Il Sung and the Clinton administration before North Korea possessed nuclear weapons.
Brokered by former president Jimmy Carter, the deal saw North Korea agree to freeze its production of nuclear weapons.The deal fell apart, with the US accusing North Korea of breaking its promises. North Korea then resumed its development of nuclear weapons.