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North Korea leader receives excellent letter from Trump
It comes as nuclear talks between the U.S. and North Korea broke down after the failed summit between Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump in February in Vietnam.
President Donald Trump sent North Korean leader Kim Jong Un an "excellent" letter, the North's state-run news agency reported Sunday, quoting Mr. Kim as saying he would "seriously contemplate it."
The White House declined to confirm that Mr. Trump had sent a letter to Mr. Kim.
It comes as nuclear talks between the U.S. and North Korea broke down after the failed summit between Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump in February in Vietnam.
The U.S. is demanding that North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons entirely before international sanctions are lifted. North Korea is seeking a step-by-step approach in which moves toward denuclearization are matched by concessions from the U.S., notably a relaxation of the sanctions.
Mr. Kim "said with satisfaction that the letter is of excellent content," Pyongyang's Korean Central News Agency reported.
"Appreciating the political judging faculty and extraordinary courage of President Trump, Kim Jong Un said that he would seriously contemplate the interesting content," the agency said, without elaborating.
South Korea's presidential office said it sees the exchange of letters between Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump as a positive development for keeping the momentum for dialogue alive.
Mr. Trump's letter also came days after Mr. Kim's summit with visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping, which experts say underscored China's emergence as a major player in the diplomatic push to resolve the nuclear standoff with the North.
North Korean state media said Mr. Kim and Mr. Xi discussed the political situation surrounding the Korean Peninsula and reached unspecified consensus on important issues.
Mr. Xi is expected to meet Mr. Trump next week in Japan during the G-20 summit. Analysts say he could pass him a message from Mr. Kim about the nuclear negotiations.
Mr. Kim said during his New Year's speech said he would seek a "new way" if the United States persists with sanctions and pressure against North Korea. After the collapse of his meeting with Mr. Trump in Hanoi, Mr. Kim said Washington has until the end of the year to offer mutually acceptable terms for a deal to salvage the negotiations.
Following a provocative run in weapons tests, Mr. Kim initiated negotiations with Seoul and Washington in 2018, which led to three summits with South Korea's president and his first with Mr. Trump in Singapore on June 12 last year, when they issued a vague statement on a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula without describing how and when it would occur. The lack of substance and fruitless working-level talks set up the breakdown of Mr. Kim's second meeting with Mr. Trump, which the Americans blamed on excessive North Korean demands for sanctions relief in exchange for only a partial surrender of its nuclear capabilities.
Nuclear negotiations have been at a standstill since then, but on the eve of the anniversary of the Singapore summit, Mr. Trump told U.S. reporters he received a "beautiful" letter from Mr. Kim, without revealing what was written. In an interview with TIME magazine last week, Mr. Trump said he also received a "birthday letter" from Mr. Kim that was delivered by hand a day before.
Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim also exchanged letters in 2018 after their first summit. White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said at the time that the letters addressed their commitment to work toward North Korea's "complete denuclearization."
In September 2018, Mr. Trump told a cheering crowd at a campaign rally in West Virginia that Mr. Kim "wrote me beautiful letters and they're great letters. We fell in love."
Analysts say the gesture of sending letters is part of North Korean efforts to present Kim as a legitimate international statesman who is reasonable and capable of negotiating solutions and making deals. Because of the weight of formality they provide, Mr. Kim might see personal letters as an important way to communicate with leaders of countries the North never had close ties with, they say
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