Biden calls for ‘realistic approach’ to North Korea

A call for a “realistic approach” to its subject North Korea Joe Biden acknowledged that negotiations to denuclearize Pyongyang would be extremely delicate.

“We have no illusions about the difficulty of the mission, absolutely none. The last four governments have not achieved their goal. “It is an extremely difficult goal,” said their president USA during a joint White House press conference with his South Korean counterpart, Moon Jae-in.

Announcing that he had appointed the experienced diplomat Sung Kim as special envoy, the Democratic president did not rule out meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at some point, but stressed that he would not do so without clear commitments from the latter.

He took the opportunity to criticize the approach of Donald Trump’s predecessor, who had met twice with “President Kim” (in Singapore and then in Hanoi) without achieving tangible results.

“I will not offer him international recognition (without consideration),” Biden insisted.

Neither obsession for a “big deal” nor “strategic patience”: Joe Biden had already rejected the approaches of his two predecessors, Donald Trump and Barack Obama. But he did not disclose his strategic approach to the issue yesterday and contented himself with general wording, calling for “realistic” progress in reducing tensions and approaching the “ultimate goal”: “the denuclearization of North Korea.”

The South Korean president, who was the architect of the Trump-mediated mediation between Pyongyang and Washington, hopes to use the last year of his term to finally achieve a “lasting peace” on the peninsula.

Yesterday, he praised Washington’s “will for dialogue.” However, how will Pyongyang return to the negotiating table? The isolated regime has already denounced the “hostile” and “fraudulent” diplomacy of the new US administration.

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