North Korea wants to initiate nuclear talks with the United States if Donald Trump is re-elected as president and is working to devise a new negotiating strategy, said a senior North Korean diplomat who recently defected to South Korea.
Last month the escape of Ri Il Gyu from Cuba made headlines globally. He was the highest-ranking North Korean diplomat to defect to the South since 2016. In his first interview with international media, Ri said North Korea has set Russia, the U.S. and Japan as its top foreign policy priorities for this year and beyond.
‘While strengthening relations with Russia, Pyongyang was keen to restart nuclear negotiations if Trump who engaged in both fiery brinkmanship and unprecedented diplomacy with North Korea during his previous term won re-election in November’, said Ri.
Pyongyang’s diplomats were mapping out a strategy for that scenario, with the aim of lifting of sanctions on its weapons programmes, removing its designation as a state sponsor of terrorism and eliciting economic aid, said Ri. His comments signal a potential about-face from the North’s current stance after statements ditching the possibility of dialogue with the U.S. and warning of armed confrontation.
A summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Trump in Vietnam in 2019 collapsed over sanctions, for which Ri partly blamed Kim’s decision to entrust inexperienced military commanders with nuclear diplomacy.
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