Trump-Kim summit in Vietnam: All the latest updates

Vietnam’s Hanoi is hosting the second summit between North Korea and the United States on February 27-28.

The denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula and ending international sanctions against Pyongyang are expected to be the main items on the agenda in the discussions between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump.

The two leaders held a landmark summit in Singapore last year, the first between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader.

The June 2018 meeting produced a vague statement in which Kim and Trump outlined four commitments without an exact timeline: establishing “new relations” for peace and prosperity; building a “lasting and stable peace regime on the Korean Peninsula”; working “towards denuclearisation”; and recovering and repatriating the remains of soldiers killed during the 1950-1953 Korean War.

This time, the stakes appear to be higher amid growing expectations that the two leaders will need to make a more detailed agreement that will result in tangible progress.

Here are all the latest updates as of Tuesday, February 26:

After Kim, Pompeo also in Hanoi

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives in Hanoi, where he is due to met Washington’s Special Representative for North Korea Stephen Biegun later.

Pompeo, Trump’s top envoy in his efforts to improve ties with North Korea, has made several trips to Pyongyang to negotiate steps towards ending its nuclear programme.

Trump, Kim to hold brief talks, have dinner on Wednesday

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders tells reporters on Air Force One that Trump will meet Kim for a brief one-on-one conversation on Wednesday evening followed by a social dinner, at which they will each be accompanied by two guests and interpreters.

She says more meetings between the two leaders will take place on Thursday.

Kim arrives at Dong Dang, on Vietnam’s border with China [Nhan Sang/VNA via Reuters]

Kim arrives in Vietnam

After a long train journey through North Korea and thousands of kilometres across China, Kim arrives at the Vietnamese border station of Dong Dang.

Top Vietnamese officials are on hand to receive him at the station with a red carpet, including a guard of honour, with the North Korean and Vietnamese flags hoisted high.

Kim is greeted by Vietnamese officials and a gathered crowd [Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters]

Dressed in his trademark dark Mao suit, Kim disembarks from his armoured train, smiling and waving at a crowd gathered on a cold, rainy morning,

The North Korean leader steps into a black limousine surrounded by bodyguards who run alongside the vehicle as it leaves the station, presumably on its way to Hanoi, some 170km away.

North Korean bodyguards run along a limousine transporting Kim [Reuters]

Monday, February 25:

Vietnam pledges ‘maximum-level’ security

With Kim on board a train crossing China towards Hanoi and Trump about to board a flight to Vietnam’s capital, Vietnamese officials are scrambling to complete preparations for the much-anticipated summit.

Officials in Hanoi have pledged to provide airtight security for the two leaders, despite having had around 10 days to prepare for the event.

“Security will be at the maximum level,” Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Hoai Trung told reporters at a briefing to showcase the country’s efforts to welcome Kim and Trump.

Another official, Nguyen Manh Hung, the leader of the information ministry, said that the 3,000 journalists from 40 countries expected in Hanoi could rely on his agency as “you’d count on a family member”.

Vietnamese soldiers at the Dong Dang railway station where Kim is expected to arrive [Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters]

Can North Korea follow Vietnam to economic success?

It’s dynamic, open to the outside world and becoming richer fast – while being run by a single-party communist government. Vietnam’s economy is being held up by the US as an example for North Korea to follow if it gives up its nuclear weapons.

But not everyone agrees that Kim could achieve what Vietnam has without giving up his tight grip on power.

Read more here.

US asks Russia for advice before summit

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says Washington has asked Moscow for advice before the summit in Hanoi, according to Interfax.

The news agency quotes Lavrov as saying there is no quick solution to the Korean Peninsula issue, adding that the United Nations could have lifted some sanctions against Pyongyang that hamper relations between North Korea and South Korea.

Vietnam aiming to cash in on ‘valuable’ event

Officials and analysts predict future economic gains as Vietnam steps up preparations to host the second summit between the two leaders.

Read more here.

Sunday, February 24:

US manages expectations for second summit

Trump is predicting a “continuation of the progress” made in Singapore, in an apparent effort to manage expectations for his second summit with Kim.

In a Twitter post, Trump says he is leaving early on Monday for the meeting in Hanoi, while also wondering: “Denuclearization?” He also says Kim knows that “without nuclear weapons, his country could fast become one of the great economic powers anywhere in the world”.

Heading into this week’s summit, Trump has said that North Korea has not tested any nuclear weapons in months and that as long as that testing has ceased, he is in no rush.

Speaking to Fox News Sunday TV programme, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says he is hoping for a “substantive step forward.” But, he cautioned, “it may not happen, but I hope that it will.”

“President Trump has also said this is going to take time. There may have to be another summit. We may not get everything done this week,” Pompeo adds.

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *