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U.S., South Korea Discussing Incentives for Kim in Nuclear Talks

Restarting stalled business projects being discussed: South Korea Foreign Minister.

U.S., South Korea Discussing Incentives for Kim in Nuclear Talks
A South Korean weekly newspaper displaying a photograph of North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un on its front page in Seoul, South Korea. (Photographer: Jean Chung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. and South Korea are discussing “corresponding measures” to reward North Korea’s steps toward denuclearization, South Korea’s foreign minister said, as President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un prepare for a possible second summit.

Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha told a news conference Wednesday in Seoul that the allies were reviewing various packages of incentives that Washington could bring to the table in the meeting. While Kang provided few details other than to say restarting stalled business projects were being discussed, the term can cover everything from sanctions relief to moves to formalize the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

U.S., South Korea Discussing Incentives for Kim in Nuclear Talks

“Between South Korea and the United States, we are closely consulting what kinds of denuclearization measures should be followed and what the United States and the international community can do as corresponding measures,” she said at a New Year’s news conference. She said she expected nuclear talks to pick up speed.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying confirmed Wednesday that Kim Yong Chol -- a senior North Korean official who last year delivered Kim Jong Un’s letter to Trump before their first summit -- will transit through Beijing on Thursday en route to another location. CNN reported earlier that Kim Yong Chol was due to meet U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo in Washington this week.

Negotiations between the U.S. and North Korea have sputtered since Trump and Kim Jong Un signed an agreement during their first meeting in June to “work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula,” without defining the phrase or setting any deadlines. North Korea argues the deal implied a step-by-step approach, where each of its actions are met by U.S. responses, while Trump administration officials assert that Kim Jong Un accepted his country’s “final, fully verified denuclearization.”

Kim Jong Un warned in his New Year’s address this month that he could be forced to take a “new path” in talks if Trump didn’t relax sanctions pressure. He pressed for U.S. concessions to reward his decisions last year to halt weapons tests and dismantle some testing facilities, without offering additional steps.

“If the United States takes a credible action in response to our proactive and preemptive efforts and responds to the corresponding measures, the relationship between the two countries will move forward at a good and rapid pace through the process of taking more certain and innovative steps is,” Kim Jong Un said on Jan. 1.

While South Korea wasn’t independently considering resuming cooperation projects at a North Korean mountain resort or the joint factory park in the North, Kang said such moves were part of the “various combination of corresponding measures” being discussed. “Details of the results will be generated during the negotiations between North Korea and the United States,” she said.

--With assistance from Dandan Li.

To contact the reporter on this story: Youkyung Lee in Seoul at ylee582@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Jon Herskovitz

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