China might be meddling in US-North Korea talks, says Trump

But US intelligence already concluded that the North does not intend to give up its nuclear programme completely

FILE - In this June 12, 2018, file photo, North Korea leader Kim Jong Un, left, and U.S. President Donald Trump shake hands at the conclusion of their meetings at the Capella resort on Sentosa Island in Singapore. North Korea��������s vitriolic criticism of the U.S. following the first round of nuclear negotiations went out of its way to spare one person: President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, Pool, File)
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US President Donald Trump suggested that China might be seeking to derail US efforts aimed at getting North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons, but said he was confident that the North's leader Kim Jong-un would uphold a pact the two agreed last month.

In his first remarks about challenging diplomatic talks held at the weekend that sowed doubts over North Korea's willingness to give up its nuclear arsenal, Mr Trump said China "may be exerting negative pressure" in reaction to punitive US tariffs on Chinese goods.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reported progress from the first high-level talks since Mr Trump met Mr Kim in Singapore, although he said a hard road lay ahead - North Korea accused him of "gangster-like" diplomacy after he left Pyongyang.

Following the June 12 Trump-Kim summit in which Mr Kim made a broad agreement to "work toward denuclearisation" of the Korean Peninsula, Mr Trump went on to say that North Korea was no longer a nuclear threat, although no detail was announced.

Mr Pompeo went to Pyongyang aiming to "fill in" details of the agreement. On Monday, he said that "many hours" of negotiations remained to be carried out.

"Now is the time for all of us, the state department and others to deliver, to implement the agreement between President Trump and Chairman Kim," Mr Pompeo told Nato troops at the end of a visit to Afghanistan.

"To think this would happen in the course of a handful of hours would have been ludicrous," Mr Pompeo said.

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The post-summit statements did not say how or when the reclusive state would dismantle its nuclear missile programme that is believed to be capable of hitting the US.

Leaked US intelligence findings have concluded that North Korea does not intend to give up its nuclear programme completely.

A Twitter post by Mr Trump in which he suggested that China might be spoiling North Korea talks was another twist in his rollercoaster approach to Beijing, a mix of praise and criticism, diplomatic outreach and outright aggression.

In Beijing on Tuesday, when asked about the US president's comments, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said, "First, China's position on the Korean peninsula issue is consistent. Second, China's attitude on the China-US trade issue is clear. Third, China is a trustworthy and responsible power."

She did not elaborate.

The administration worked for months to win China's support for its "maximum pressure" campaign of sanctions to isolate North Korea, which does most of its international trade with the Chinese.

While trying to keep the Chinese on board for North Korea negotiations, Mr Trump took a tough stance on trade with China, slapping tariffs last week on $34 billion in Chinese exports to the US, prompting retaliation in kind from Beijing.

Mr Pompeo has been criticised by some US media and some Washington foreign policy observers for the lack of results and acrimony from Pyongyang, but two former US officials who have negotiated with North Korea cast his talks in a more positive light.

"Pompeo’s visit I think was a useful beginning to set out parameters and to start working on the details of a deal," said Joel Wit, founder of the 38 North research institute. "The North Koreans talked about a vague, step-by-step simultaneous approach, which seems to me the right way to move forward. That’s the only thing that’s going to work."

Retired ambassador Robert Gallucci also called, however, for the appointment of a senior special negotiator. He said Mr Trump should not have asserted that North Korea was no longer a nuclear threat, a claim that is "really flat-out misleading".

"It leads to expectations that anybody who is serious and watching this process would say you shouldn't have those expectations," Mr Gallucci said.