BFF-01 N. Korea’s Kim holds top party meeting ahead of US deadline

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N. Korea’s Kim holds top party meeting ahead of US deadline

SEOUL, Dec 29, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has
convened a key meeting of top ruling party officials, state media said
Sunday, ahead of a year-end deadline for Washington to shift its stance on
stalled nuclear talks.

The plenary session, which opened on Saturday, follows widespread
speculation that Pyongyang is preparing to test an intercontinental ballistic
missile — as a threatened “Christmas gift” for Washington.

Kim presided over the meeting which discussed a new “transparent, anti-
imperialist independent stand”, the official Korean Central News Agency
(KCNA) reported.

The ruling Workers’ Party of Korea will also “discuss important matters
arising… in the building of the state and national defence”, KCNA added.

Talks on denuclearising the Korean peninsula have been largely deadlocked
since the second summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump collapsed
in Hanoi at the start of this year.

The opening of the plenary comes a week after Kim held a meeting of top
defence officials and discussed boosting military capabilities, and ahead of
the leader’s New Year speech on January 1, a key political set-piece in the
isolated country.

Pyongyang has carried out a series of static tests at its Sohae rocket
facility this month, after a number of weapons launches in recent weeks —
some of them described as ballistic missiles by Japan and others.

North Korea is under heavy US and United Nations sanctions over its
nuclear programme, but it has been frustrated at the lack of relief after it
declared a moratorium on nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM) tests.

Russia and China — North Korea’s main ally — have proposed easing
sanctions in a bid to de-escalate tensions.

– ‘Imminent’ threat –

The ongoing meeting could have Pyongyang announce “major policy shift”
from its previous approach with the US, said Hong Min, a senior researcher at
the South’s state-run Korea Institute for National Unification.

Earlier this month, North Korean media published pictures of Kim riding a
white horse on a sacred mountain, imagery that experts said was heavy with
symbolism and may indicate a policy announcement.

“We’ll find out what the surprise is and we’ll deal with it very
successfully,” Trump said.

“Everybody’s got surprises for me, but let’s see what happens. I handle
them as they come along.”

But Trump’s former national security advisor John Bolton — a longtime
hawk on North Korea — has sharply criticised the president’s handling of the
issue, and claimed that Pyongyang poses an “imminent” threat.

The US president has invested a huge amount of political capital in his
attempt to persuade Kim to end North Korea’s isolation and give up its
nuclear weapons.

There has been little progress, however, after three face-to-face meetings
and numerous letter exchanges.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0806 hrs