Tag: Mike Pompeo

  • South Korea crew wants to import North Korea beer

    July 10 (UPI) — A South Korean team is under fireplace for uploading North Korea’s Taedonggang beer although sanctions prevent industry across the border.

    The Association for Asia Pacific Peace Change said Tuesday it “formally” acquired rights to distribute North Korea’s well-known brew and that an agreement was reached with the National Reconciliation Council, a North Korean frame, Munhwa Ilbo pronounced Tuesday.

    The Crowd does not have an respectable English name however its Korean name more or less interprets to Affiliation for Asia Pacific Peace Alternate.

    Ahn Bu-su, the chairman of the group, stated the transfer does not violate South Korean financial sanctions that experience been in position due to the fact that May 24, 2010.

    “To earn a right to do industry with a North Korean civic affiliation has not anything to do with receiving permission from the North Korean govt,” Ahn said. “we now have already negotiated plans to modify the layout of the logo and beer bottles.”

    Ahn also mentioned he is looking into development factories in the North.

    The Group plans to usher in 1,029 bottles of Taedonggang beer, greater than 300 bottles of soju, as well as bottles of a lesser-recognized North Korean beer, Kyunghung.

    North Koreans snacks may also be brought in as samples, in step with the plan.

    Taedonggang beer made its South Korean debut within the early 2000s, whilst the 2 Koreas engaged in civic change.

    on the time, using a industry route through China, a complete of 329,000 bottles of the beer were imported, incomes greater than $ONE HUNDRED FORTY,000 for the vendors.

    Beverage trade professionals don’t seem to be proud of the crowd’s plans, according to Munhwa.

    One supply advised the paper the crowd’s assertion “has no meaning” as a result of they have got no longer received the approval of the South Korean government.

    There are “many” South Korean liquor corporations operating with North Korean brokers, the supply added.

    The Usa keeps to negotiate with North Korea, and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated “prosperity” is vital to changing the u . s . a .’s outlook, The Mother Or Father mentioned.

    Talking in Vietnam, Pompeo stated Vietnam’s enjoy is an instance for some way ahead.

    “In gentle of the once not possible prosperity and partnership now we have with Vietnam these days, i have a message for Chairman Kim Jong Un: President Trump believes your usa can reflect this trail,” Pompeo stated.

    “It Is yours if you can you seize the instant.”

  • South Korea’s Moon Jae-in: Joint drills must be ‘reviewed’

    June 14 (UPI) — Annual joint workout routines between the United States Of America and South Korea must be “reviewed,” if they coincide with dialogue with North Korea, South Korean President Moon Jae-in stated Thursday.

    Moon, who met with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday, then held a general assembly of his national safety council, praised President Donald Trump for holding the summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un this week, Yonhap mentioned.

    “again I pay tribute to President Trump and North Korean Chairman Kim Jong Un for his or her daring courage and get to the bottom of for creating a difficult selection,” Moon mentioned. “I hang within the easiest regard the leaders of the Usa and North Korea after 70 years of hostilities, to fulfill and conform to identify a permanent peace regime and to agree at the entire denuclearization of North Korea.”

    Moon additionally stated within the spirit of the Panmunjom Assertion signed with the North on April 27, there is a need to “moderately evaluate” the joint workout routines.

    “If North Korea in reality contains out denuclearization measures, sincere dialogue maintains and hostilities with the America and South Korea are resolved, in the spirit of mutual agree with of the Panmunjom Announcement, there’s a need for flexible amendment on army pressure and thoroughly evaluate the U.S.-South Korea joint coaching,” he mentioned.

    Moon’s remarks come after Trump defined the workouts as “very provocative” warfare video games which might be “enormously dear.”

    “We save a fortune through not doing battle video games, as lengthy as we’re negotiating in just right faith — which both sides are!” Trump tweeted Wednesday.

    The South Korean president quickly ruled out the possibility the alliance with the America is changing.

    “We should take care of our unshaken defense posture, primarily based at the alliance,” Moon said.

    In Seoul on Thursday, Pompeo informed South Korean journalists the objective is to complete top denuclearization measures by 2020. U.N. sanctions will remain till there’s proof North Korea has totally denuclearized, The Korea Occasions suggested Thursday.

    Pompeo didn’t cope with North Korea’s human rights report in his remarks.

    Native paper Munhwa Ilbo said lack of momentum in Seoul on human rights may be accountable for the closure of a government-led North Korea Human Rights Foundation, greater than years after a North Korean human rights invoice was once signed into legislation.

  • Mike Pompeo says Donald Trump ‘unambiguous’ with Kim Jong-un on conditions for freezing drills

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offered the first snapshot of a possible timeline for North Korean denuclearization Wednesday, saying the U.S. wants Pyongyang to show clear evidence of major disarmamen

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offered the first snapshot of a possible timeline for North Korean denuclearization Wednesday, saying the U.S. wants Pyongyang to show clear evidence of major disarmament steps before President Trump’s term in office ends in January 2021.

    Mr. Pompeo also asserted that Mr. Trump was “unambiguous” about the conditions of freezing U.S.-South Korea military drills during the historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un that was held in Singapore on Tuesday.

    The secretary of state, who made the assertions during a visit Wednesday to South Korea, said Mr. Trump’s vow to freeze U.S.-South Korean military drills is contingent on Pyongyang’s commitment to positive denuclearization negotiations.

    After signing a joint statement at the Singapore summit on the broad goal of ridding the Korean peninsula of nuclear weapons, Mr. Trump revealed he had promised to Mr. Kim that the military drills, which the president referred to as “war games,” would be halted.

    Pyongyang has has long lamented the joint drills, characterizing them as practice for an invasion of North Korea.

    Mr. Pompeo said Wednesday that he was present when Mr. Trump discussed the matter with Mr. Kim. The secretary of state said Mr. Trump “made very clear” to the North Korean leader that the condition for freezing the drills was that good-faith talks continue, The Associated Press reported.

    He added that if the U.S. concludes that discussions with North Korea are no longer are in good faith, the freeze “will no longer be in effect.”

    Mr. Trump was “unambiguous” in conveying the message to Mr. Kim, Mr. Pompeo said.

  • The Latest: Trump’s claim of no nuke threat seen as dubious

    The Latest on the summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (all times local):

    WASHINGTON (AP) – The Latest on the summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (all times local):

    11:30 a.m.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says he’s confident that U.S. talks with North Korea will resume “sometime in the next week.”

    Pompeo says he doesn’t know the exact timing. Speaking in Seoul, he says he expects it to happen fairly quickly after he and the North Koreans return to their nations. Pompeo returns late Thursday to the U.S.

    He says President Donald Trump is “in the lead” but that “I will be the person who takes the role of driving this process forward.”

    He says much more work has been done by the U.S. and North Korean that couldn’t be encapsulated in the Trump-Kim Jong Un statement. So he says teams will now work to make more progress on those items.

    ___

    11:20 a.m.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says the United States wants North Korea to take major nuclear disarmament steps within the next two years.

    Pompeo is laying out an ambitious timeline for denuclearization following President Donald Trump’s meeting with Kim Jong Un. He says he won’t disclose specific timelines but that the administration is hopeful that “major, major disarmament” steps can occur before the end of Trump’s first term. The term ends in January 2021.

    Pompeo is also urging skepticism after North Korean official media said Trump had agreed to a step-by-step approach to denuclearization. Pompeo isn’t being specific but says that “one should heavily discount some things that are written in other places.”

    Pompeo spoke to reporters from Seoul, South Korea.

    ___

    11:15 a.m.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un understands that “there will be in-depth verification” of nuclear commitments in any deal with the U.S.

    Pompeo is pushing back on criticism that the joint agreement signed by Kim and President Donald Trump includes no mention of verifying North Korean nuclear disarmament. Ahead of Trump’s summit with Kim, the U.S. had said disarmament must be “complete, verifiable and irreversible.”

    But Pompeo tells reporters that it’s silly to focus on the lack of the word “verifiable.” He says that’s because the agreement does refer to “complete” denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Pompeo says that “in the minds of everyone concerned,” the word “complete” encompasses “verifiable.”

    Pompeo says: “I am equally confident they understand that there will be in-depth verification.”

    ___

    11:10 a.m.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises will resume if North Korea stops negotiating in good faith over its nuclear program.

    Pompeo is in South Korea a day after President Donald Trump met with Kim Jong Un and announced the U.S. would freeze what he called “war games” with North Korea.

    Pompeo says he was there when Trump talked about it with Kim. He says Trump “made very clear” that the condition for the freeze was that good-faith talks continue. He says if the U.S. concludes they no longer are in good faith, the freeze “will no longer be in effect.”

    Pompeo says Trump was “unambiguous” in conveying that to Kim.

    ___

    11 a.m.

    House Speaker Paul Ryan says President Donald Trump should be “applauded” for his meeting with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un. But Ryan is cautioning on Wednesday that the next steps toward an agreement won’t go fast.

    The Wisconsin Republican, who is retiring this year, told reporters that “The president needed to disrupt the status quo, and the president has disrupted the status quo” with the historic meeting in Singapore. He said “the president should be applauded….Now let’s go get an agreement.”

    Trump and Kim signed a joint statement that contained a repeat of past promises to work toward a denuclearized Korean Peninsula, but the details haven’t been nailed down.

    He cautioned that no one should expect that process to go quickly. “Time,” he said, “will tell how this ends.”

    ___

    10 a.m.

    President Donald Trump is challenging skeptical media coverage of his historic summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. He says “Fake News” is the nation’s “biggest enemy.”

    Trump writes on Twitter that “the Fake News, especially NBC and CNN” are “fighting hard to downplay the deal with North Korea.”

    Trump says that “500 days ago they would have ‘begged’ for this deal-looked like war would break out.”

    The president says the country’s “biggest enemy is the Fake News so easily promulgated by fools!”

    Trump has been tweeting about his talks with Kim since Air Force One returned to the United States early Wednesday morning, arguing that the talks with North Korea have made the U.S. safer. Trump’s claim is dubious considering Pyongyang’s significant weapons arsenal.

    ___

    7:25 a.m.

    President Donald Trump is defending his calls to end military exercises with South Korea that allies have said is important to security in the Asia Pacific region.

    Trump says on Twitter after returning from his Singapore summit that “we save a fortune by not doing war games, as long as we are negotiating in good faith.”

    Trump has said the U.S. and South Korea should stop their joint military exercises as long as both sides are negotiating in good faith, which the president says is happening.

    Back in the United States, Trump is tweeting about his historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. He says there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea even though experts estimate that Kim’s government has enough fissile material for 20 to 60 bombs.

    __

    6:15 a.m.

    President Donald Trump says on Twitter, “There is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea,” as he returns to the United States after his historic summit with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un.

    Trump says on Twitter that “everybody can now feel much safer than the day I took office.”

    He says before he took office, “people were assuming that we were going to War with North Korea,” and President Barack Obama said North Korea was the nation’s biggest problem.

    Trump and Kim signed an agreement to work toward denuclearization, but it appears weaker than past deals that failed. Independent experts estimate North Korea now has enough fissile material for 20 to 60 bombs, and it has tested missiles that could potentially deliver a nuclear weapon to the U.S. mainland.

    ___

    5:37 a.m.

    President Donald Trump has arrived back in Washington from his historic nuclear summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

    Air Force One touched down at Joint Base Andrews early Wednesday morning, completing the president’s marathon trip to Asia for talks with the North Korean leader. The president made refueling stops in Guam and Hawaii on his return to Washington.

    While his aircraft refueled in Hawaii, Trump thanked Kim for “taking the first bold step toward a bright new future for his people,” saying their summit on Tuesday “proves that real change is possible!”

    During his return, Trump spoke with South Korean Prime Minister Moon Jae-in and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

    ___

    6:25 p.m.

    U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has landed at Osan Air Base south of Seoul ahead of meetings with America’s allies in the aftermath of the summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    He’s expected to meet privately in the evening with Gen. Vincent Brooks, commander of U.S. Forces Korea.

    Pompeo will meet President Moon Jae-in on Thursday morning to discuss the summit.

    Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono is also heading to Seoul and is due to meet with Pompeo and his South Korean counterpart. Pompeo, the former CIA director, then plans to fly to Beijing to update the Chinese government on the talks.

    ___

    5:05 p.m.

    Russia is welcoming the outcome of the summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov says “one can only welcome the fact that such a meeting took place and that direct dialogue was begun.”

    Peskov tells reporters in Moscow on Wednesday that the meeting helps de-escalate tensions and push the situation away “from the critical point where it was just a few months ago.”

    Peskov says the meeting confirms Russian President Vladimir Putin’s view that “there is no alternative to political and diplomatic means in solving the problem of the Korean Peninsula.”

    Peskov adds, however, that given how complicated the situation is around North Korea, the Kremlin isn’t expecting a quick resolution.

    ___

    3:20 p.m.

    A spokesman of South Korean President Moon Jae-in says Washington and Seoul need to consider a “variety of ways to further facilitate dialogue” while they are engaged in nuclear negotiations with Pyongyang.

    Kim Eui-kyeom made the comments on Wednesday when asked to respond to President Donald Trump, who following his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said that the United States and South Korea should stop their joint military exercises “as long as we are negotiating in good faith.”

    Kim, Moon’s spokesman, says Seoul is still trying to figure out the exact meaning and intent of Trump’s comments.

    ___

    10:50 a.m.

    The U.S. top diplomat is jetting to South Korea to brief the country’s president as Asian allies try to parse the implications of the extraordinary nuclear summit in Singapore between President Donald Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

    South Korea’s presidential office says U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will meet President Moon Jae-in Thursday morning to discuss the meeting, which made history as the first between sitting leaders of the U.S. and North Korea.

    Trump and Kim reached a broad agreement that offered few specifics but included promises of U.S. security guarantees and a reiteration from Kim of his country’s commitment to “complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”

    Trump however seems to have caught allies off guard by saying he would stop U.S.-South Korean war games.

  • The Latest: Panel approves Pompeo for secretary of state

    The Latest on the nomination of Mike Pompeo as secretary of state (all times local):

    WASHINGTON (AP) – The Latest on the nomination of Mike Pompeo as secretary of state (all times local):

    6:30 p.m.

    President Donald Trump’s choice for secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, has cleared the Senate Foreign Relations Committee with a favorable recommendation, narrowly avoiding a rare rebuke as his confirmation heads to the full Senate.

    Democrats put up stiff resistance and voted against Pompeo, who is now the CIA director. Only a last-minute switch from Kentucky Republican Rand Paul – whom Trump called before the vote – enabled Pompeo to win committee approval.

    It would have been the first time since the committee starting keeping records in 1925 that a secretary of state nominee faced an unfavorable report.

    Pompeo’s nomination now goes to the full Senate, where votes are tallying in his favor. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he looks forward to voting to confirm Pompeo this week.

    ___

    5:25 p.m.

    Sen. Rand Paul says he now supports Mike Pompeo as secretary of state.

    The Kentucky Republican announced his position after talking with President Donald Trump moments before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was set to consider the nominee. Pompeo hasn’t had sufficient support from the panel for a favorable recommendation, but Paul’s support could change that outcome.

    Paul says on Twitter that after talking with Trump and meeting with the nominee he received assurances that Pompeo believes the Iraq war “was a mistake, that regime change has destabilized the region, and that we must end our involvement with Afghanistan.”

    With those assurances, the senator says he has “decided to support his nomination to be our next secretary of state.”

    ___

    3:40 p.m.

    Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he’s looking forward to voting to confirm President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, later this week in the Senate.

    McConnell is making the upbeat assessment after two more Democratic senators announced support for Pompeo, now the CIA director, despite steep opposition expected Monday evening at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The panel is unlikely to have the votes to give a favorable recommendation, but the nominee is expected to find wider support in the full Senate.

    McConnell says that with Pompeo, “the United States will have a chief diplomat who enjoys the total confidence of the president.”

    The Republican leader says he looks “forward to upholding the tradition of this body and voting to confirm him this week.”

    ___

    1:30 p.m.

    Mike Pompeo’s nomination for secretary of state has received a boost because two Democratic senators announced they would support his confirmation before the full Senate.

    Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Sen. Joe Donnelly of Indiana both backed Pompeo when he was confirmed as CIA director. But other Democrats have been peeling away, and Pompeo is not likely to have enough support Monday for a favorable recommendation from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    Neither Manchin nor Donnelly is on the panel, but their votes will help push Pompeo’s nomination before the full Senate vote expected later this week.

    Manchin says “during this sensitive diplomatic time, it’s important our next secretary of state understands the grave threats facing our nation and can offer diplomatic solutions to avoid conflict, as soon as possible.”

    ___

    9:30 a.m.

    President Donald Trump is attacking Democrats as he seeks Senate confirmation of Mike Pompeo as secretary of State.

    Trump says on Twitter Monday: “Hard to believe Obstructionists May vote against Mike Pompeo for Secretary of State. The Dems will not approve hundreds of good people, including the Ambassador to Germany. They are maxing out the time on approval process for all, never happened before. Need more Republicans!”

    Pompeo’s nomination faces serious opposition from key Democrats and at least one Republican. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee may not have enough votes to recommend him for confirmation.

    The full Senate is still expected to consider Pompeo’s nomination later this week. But the rebuke from the panel would be the first time in years a nominee for the position did not receive a favorable vote.

    ___

    President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, is facing serious opposition before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    The panel may not have enough votes to recommend him for confirmation Monday as all Democrats, and at least one Republican, have said they will oppose him.

    The full Senate is still expected to consider Pompeo’s nomination later this week. But the rare rebuke from the panel, even after Pompeo’s recent visit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, would be the first time in years a nominee for the high-level Cabinet position did not receive a favorable vote.

    The chairman of the committee, Republican Sen. Bob Corker, blames partisan politics for opposition to Pompeo, saying the CIA chief is just as qualified as past nominees for secretary of state.