North Korea’s foreign minister on Thursday met with his Swedish counterpart after making a surprise trip to Stockholm that has fueled speculation about a meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
North Korean Minister of Foreign Affairs Ri Yong-ho landed at Stockholm Arlanda Airport on a direct flight from Beijing and spent several hours at the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs before returning to the North Korean embassy.
Ri’s talks with Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs Margot Wallstrom were expected to resume yesterday.
Sweden has had diplomatic relations with North Korea since 1973 and is one of the few Western countries with an embassy in Pyongyang. It provides consular services for the US in North Korea.
“If the key actors want Sweden to play a role, facilitate [talks], be a forum or a link or whatever it may be, then we are prepared to do that,” Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven told Sweden’s TT News Agency earlier on Thursday.
“We shouldn’t be naive and believe it is Sweden that solves these problems,” Lofven added.
The Swedish ministry said the talks between Wallstrom and Ri “will focus on Sweden’s consular responsibilities as a protecting power for the United States, Canada and Australia,” but would also address the security situation on the Korean Peninsula.
It referred to the UN Security Council’s condemnation of North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missile programs, saying that the UN “emphasized the need for intensified diplomatic efforts to find a peaceful solution to the conflict.”
The Swedish ministry said a statement summarizing the talks would be made available later yesterday.
Ri, a former diplomat in Stockholm and London and a former nuclear envoy with experience negotiating with rivals South Korea and the US, was tapped as Pyongyang’s foreign minister in 2016.
In a memo to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres last month, Ri urged the UN not to remain silent about what he called “the US’ dangerous game of aggravating [the] situation in and around the Korean Peninsula and driving the whole world into a possible disaster of nuclear war.”
The trip by Ri is being closely watched, because there remains a huge amount of preparation that needs to be done and relatively little time before Kim is supposedly planning to sit down for summits with South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Trump.
Trump has agreed to meet Kim by May.
So far, North Korea has yet to publicly comment on what it hopes to gain from the summits, adding an extra element of mystery and skepticism.
Sweden has been rumored as a possible site for the summit between Kim and Trump, although a truce village on the South Korean side of the Demilitarized Zone between the Koreas is seen as more likely.
Senior South Korean officials who traveled to Pyongyang earlier this month and met with Kim said he is willing to discuss the North’s nuclear weapons program.
It could suggest a potential breakthrough, or a fallback to the North’s long-standing position that it is willing to get rid of its nuclear weapons if the US guarantees its safety.
In the past, that has meant Washington would have to withdraw all of its troops from South Korea, a condition no US president has been willing to consider.
Niklas Swanstrom of the Stockholm-based Institute for Security and Development Policy said the meeting between the two foreign ministers would only be preliminary to higher-level talks, but they could give an indication of North Korea’s interests and demands.
“The assumption is of course that [they] will speak a bit about the proposed talks between Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un,” Swanstrom said.
James Watson — the Nobel laureate co-credited with the pivotal discovery of DNA’s double-helix structure, but whose career was later tainted by his repeated racist remarks — has died, his former lab said on Friday. He was 97. The eminent biologist died on Thursday in hospice care on Long Island in New York, announced the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, where he was based for much of his career. Watson became among the 20th century’s most storied scientists for his 1953 breakthrough discovery of the double helix with researcher partner Francis Crick. Along with Crick and Maurice Wilkins, he shared the
OUTRAGE: The former strongman was accused of corruption and responsibility for the killings of hundreds of thousands of political opponents during his time in office Indonesia yesterday awarded the title of national hero to late president Suharto, provoking outrage from rights groups who said the move was an attempt to whitewash decades of human rights abuses and corruption that took place during his 32 years in power. Suharto was a US ally during the Cold War who presided over decades of authoritarian rule, during which up to 1 million political opponents were killed, until he was toppled by protests in 1998. He was one of 10 people recognized by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto in a televised ceremony held at the presidential palace in Jakarta to mark National
LANDMARK: After first meeting Trump in Riyadh in May, al-Sharaa’s visit to the White House today would be the first by a Syrian leader since the country’s independence Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa arrived in the US on Saturday for a landmark official visit, his country’s state news agency SANA reported, a day after Washington removed him from a terrorism blacklist. Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted long-time former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House today. It is the first such visit by a Syrian president since the country’s independence in 1946, according to analysts. The interim leader met Trump for the first time in Riyadh during the US president’s regional tour in May. US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack earlier
US President Donald Trump handed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban a one-year exemption from sanctions for buying Russian oil and gas after the close right-wing allies held a chummy White House meeting on Friday. Trump slapped sanctions on Moscow’s two largest oil companies last month after losing patience with Russian President Vladimir Putin over his refusal to end the nearly four-year-old invasion of Ukraine. However, while Trump has pushed other European countries to stop buying oil that he says funds Moscow’s war machine, Orban used his first trip to the White House since Trump’s return to power to push for