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US, N. Korea Fail to Strike Deal in Stockholm

News2019-10-07

Anchor: The U.S. and North Korea are issuing contrasting assessments after Saturday's working-level talks -- the first in over seven months -- ended without a deal. North Korea’s chief nuclear negotiator Kim Myong-gil told reporters that it is now up to Washington to decide whether talks resume in the future. Our Kim Bum-soo recaps the nuclear talks in Sweden over the weekend and the two sides' differing evaluations.

Report: 

[Sound bite: N. Korean chief nuclear negotiator Kim Myong-gil (Korean as translated by onsite interpreter into English)]  
"The negotiation had not fulfilled our expectation and finally broke up... and I am very unpleasant about it."

North Korea says the working-level nuclear talks with the U.S. in Sweden broke down.

Speaking outside of the North Korean Embassy in Stockholm on Saturday, North Korean chief nuclear negotiator Kim Myong-gil announced his assessment of the meeting.

[Sound bite: N. Korean chief nuclear negotiator Kim Myong-gil (Korean as translated by onsite interpreter into English)]   
“The breakup of the negotiation without any outcome is totally due to the fact that the U.S. would not give up their old viewpoint and attitude... These days... the U.S. raised expectations by offering suggestions like, 'flexible approach,' 'new methods' and 'creative solutions,' but they have disappointed us greatly and dampened our enthusiasm for negotiation by bringing nothing to the negotiating table." 

While accusing the U.S. of not having proper intentions to solve the nuclear issue, the North Korean negotiator said his side advised the U.S. to reconsider its position by the end of this year. He stressed that it is entirely up to the U.S. if North Korea will continue to suspend its intercontinental ballistic missile activities.

Speaking to reporters in Beijing en route to Pyongyang on Monday, Kim said it is also up to Washington to decide whether talks resume in the future.

He expressed skepticism, however, that talks would resume within two weeks, as suggested by Sweden, saying he doubts the U.S. will be able to come up with new calculations by such time. 

On Sunday, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying the North has no intention to hold such "sickening" negotiations as the ones held over the weekend. 

In a carefully-worded statement, the U.S. denied the pessimistic assessment, saying it had good discussions with the North. U.S. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus stated that the North Korean chief negotiator's comments do not reflect the spirit of the meeting. 

While claiming that her government brought creative ideas to the talks, she said the U.S. negotiators previewed a number of new initiatives that would allow the Trump administration to make progress. 

Officials from Washington and Pyongyang held talks for more than eight hours at the Villa Elfvik Strand conference center just north of Stockholm on Saturday. The meeting was the first full-fledged nuclear talks between the two sides since the collapse of the Hanoi summit in February.
Kim Bum-soo, KBS World Radio News.

[Photo : YONHAP News]

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