Business Standard

Sunday, December 22, 2024 | 11:29 PM ISTEN Hindi

Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

US seeks step-by-step approach to Korea Peninsula denuclearisation

Biden administration is seeking a "step-by-step" approach to the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said

Biden has also pledged to donate 60 million AstraZeneca Plc vaccines by the end of June

IANS Washington

The administration of US President Joe Biden is seeking a "step-by-step" approach to the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, a compromise between the opposite strategies of two previous American administrations, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said.

On Friday, Sullivan also reiterated that the US remains committed to the 2018 agreement reached between Washington and North Korea in Singapore, which calls for complete denuclearization of North Korea in exchange for American security assurances, reports Yonhap News Agency.

"Our approach with North Korea when we came in was to look at the last two administrations," Sullivan said, referring to the administrations of former Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump.

 

The Obama administration, he noted, "really adopted this view of strategic patience, which was essentially, I would call, non-for-none".

"And then the Trump administration in Hanoi pitched all-for-all, the grand bargain," Sullivan said in a forum hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations, a New York-based non-profit think tank.

"And essentially the thrust and purpose of our policy was to come in between those two -- to be prepared to engage in diplomacy, to make step by step progress towards the ultimate goal of denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," he added.

Trump held two historic summit meetings with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un -- in Singapore in June 2018 and in Hanoi in February 2019.

At the first-ever US-North Korea summit in Singapore, the North agreed to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula while the US agreed to establish new relations with the North, which, according to many, would provide some security guarantees to the North that remains under various US and UN Security Council sanctions.

"We continue to indicate to them (North Koreans) both directly and publicly as I'm doing right now that we are prepared to engage to try to make progress against the basic points that were laid down in the Singapore summit back in 2018," said Sullivan.

North Korea has stayed away from denuclearization talks with the US since 2019.

Sullivan noted the North remains unresponsive to US overtures, saying: "We have not gotten traction in diplomacy with North Korea on that over the course of this year."

--IANS

ksk/

 

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Dec 18 2021 | 12:31 PM IST

Explore News