U.S. State Department says no plans for Pompeo-Kim meeting

Asia Pacific Daily

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The U.S. State Department said Thursday that it has neither plans nor

expectations for a possible meeting between State Secretary Mike Pompeo

and the top leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK),

Kim Jong Un, during Pompeo's upcoming visit to the nation.

"We

don't have that schedule. We have no expectations of meeting with

Chairman Kim," State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said in a

briefing.

"I think what's important is that we are regularizing

these meetings and these conversations with a government that we have

had very, very little interaction with over the past decade or so,"

Nauert said.

"The consultations will continue, and I imagine

you'll see more meetings and trips ahead," she added. "We look forward

to having those conversations."

She also said the newly appointed

special envoy for the DPRK issue, Stephen Biegun, will pick up "some of

those meetings that perhaps the secretary normally would have gone on or

would have conducted. So I think this is just sort of the more -- more

of a normalization of our types of conversations."

Earlier on Thursday, Pompeo said that he has appointed Biegun as the new special envoy for the DPRK.

He also said that he and Biegun will travel to Pyongyang next week "to make further diplomatic progress towards our objective."

Pompeo has visited the DPRK three times -- in April, May and July.

U.S.

President Donald Trump on Monday said he would "most likely" meet with

Kim for a second time and believed Pyongyang had taken specific steps

toward denuclearization, adding that he has "great chemistry" with Kim.