Hailing diplomacy, US Pres Trump announces new N.Korea summit in Vietnam

WASHINGTON, Feb 6 (NNN-AGENCIES) — US President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced that his second summit with North Korea will take place later this month in Vietnam as he also reported headway in talks with the Taliban.

Delivering his annual State of the Union address to Congress after being
politically battered by a partial government shutdown, Trump hailed his
diplomacy with North Korea and seized on the drama of the setting to reveal his long-planned second summit with leader Kim Jong Un.

Trump said he would meetKim on Feb 27 and 28 in
Vietnam, although he did not specify the venue.

“Our hostages have come home, nuclear testing has stopped, and there has
not been a missile launch in 15 months,” Trump told lawmakers assembled in the House chamber.

“If I had not been elected President of the United States, we would right
now, in my opinion, be in a major war with North Korea. Much work remains to be done, but my relationship with Kim Jong Un is a good one,” he said.

Trump met Kim in June in Singapore, the first-ever summit between leaders
of the two countries that have never formally ended the 1950-53 Korean War, months after the US leader was threatening to obliterate North Korea over its nuclear and missile tests.

Since the summit, Trump has since mused that he and Kim have fallen “in
love” and voiced eagerness to meet him, although critics say that North
Korea’s promises remain vague.

The two leaders in Vietnam will need to work out the meaning of North
Korea’s promise in Singapore of “denuclearization,” with Kim envisaging an
end to all weapons in the peninsula rather than quickly giving up the arsenal built for decades by the totalitarian dynasty.

The US special envoy on North Korea, Stephen Biegun, heads Wednesday for talks in Pyongyang on preparing the summit.

Biegun said last week that, while not lifting all sanctions without
denuclearization, Washington was ready to take first steps to support North
Korea’s badly needed economic development.

Trump, in a speech focused primarily on domestic priorities including his
tough line on immigration, cast himself as a realist in the world, saying he
is pursuing “a foreign policy that puts America’s interests first.”

“Great nations do not fight endless wars,” Trump said, after his
controversial orders to pull all US troops out of Syria and half of the
14,000-strong force in Afghanistan.

Trump voiced guarded hope that intensifying negotiations with Afghanistan’s Taliban would bring for a “possible political solution” to end the longest-ever US war.

“My administration is holding constructive talks with a number of Afghan
groups, including the Taliban,” he said.

“We do not know whether we will achieve an agreement — but we do know that after two decades of war, the hour has come to at least try for peace,” he said.

US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad in January held an unusually long six days of
negotiations with Taliban representatives in Qatar.

While Khalilzad has stressed that much remains to discuss, the broad goal
would be for the United States to pull troops from Afghanistan and for the
Taliban to ensure that foreign extremists will not be based on its territory
— the reason for the US invasion after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

But the Taliban have refused to negotiate with the internationally
recognized government in Kabul. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani tweeted ahead of Trump’s speech that he had spoken to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who “underscored the central importance of ensuring the centrality of the Afghan government in the peace process.”

In contrast to Trump’s frequent instincts to stay out of foreign conflicts,
he has intervened forcefully in the crisis in Venezuela where he has
recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido as the interim president.

In his address, Trump tied Venezuela to US politics as he tried to equate
liberal opponents at home with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whose leftist regime presides over a crumbling economy that has sent millions fleeing to neighboring countries.

“We stand with the Venezuelan people in their noble quest for freedom —
and we condemn the brutality of the Maduro regime, whose socialist policies have turned that nation from being the wealthiest in South America into a state of abject poverty and despair,” Trump said.

“We are born free, and we will stay free. Tonight, we renew our resolve
that America will never be a socialist country,” he said to boisterous cheers
from Republicans.

Left-leaning US lawmakers have rejected such comparisons, saying that their calls for a higher minimum wage and a more stable safety net has nothing to do with the corruption and mismanagement of Venezuela. — NNN-AGENCIES

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