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| China retains a strong influence in North Korea |
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un briefed Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday about his historic summit with US President Donald Trump, a visit that underscores Beijing's efforts to remain at the centre of fast-moving nuclear diplomacy.
Xi urged
the US and North Korea to implement the agreements reached at the June 12
summit in Singapore, while Kim thanked Xi for his role in the diplomatic
efforts, according to Chinese state media.
Kim's third
trip to China since March comes as Beijing tries to strengthen its role as a
mediator between the US and the North, where it claims compelling security and
economic interests.
The North's
leader, who is believed to have landed in the Chinese capital Tuesday morning,
was greeted with a military honour guard at the ornate Great Hall of the
People, as the Cold War-era allies repair ties that worsened when Pyongyang
tested nuclear weapons and Beijing backed UN sanctions.
Kim
"felt thanks for and highly praised China's promotion of denuclearisation
of the Korean Peninsula and its important role in protecting the peninsula's
peace and stability," state broadcaster CCTV said.
North Korea
"hopes to work with China and other concerned parties to promote and
establish a solid, long-lasting peace mechanism on the Korean Peninsula and
make joint efforts to achieve a lasting peace on the peninsula."
For his
part, Xi told Kim he "wants North Korea and the US to carry out the results
of their leadership summit", the report said.
Trump and Kim pledged in a joint summit statement to "work toward the complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula".
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The
motorcade believed to be carrying North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
is escorted
through Beijing
|
Trump and Kim pledged in a joint summit statement to "work toward the complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula".
In return,
Trump made the shock announcement that he would stop joint military drills with
South Korea, long seen as a provocation by Pyongyang and Beijing. The US and
South Korean militaries confirmed Tuesday they have called off a major joint
exercise.
Kim told Xi
his summit with Trump "achieved results that are in line with the interests
of all parties and the expectations of the international communities,"
according to CCTV.
"If
the two parties can solidly implement the summit's consensus step by step, it
will open a new, important phase of the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula."
The United
States relies on China to enforce UN economic sanctions against the North,
giving Beijing potential leverage in its looming trade war with Washington.
"I
think that North Korea can be another card Beijing can play to win leverage in
negotiations with Washington," Yang Moo-jin, professor at Seoul's
University of North Korean Studies, told AFP.
Following
the Singapore summit, China suggested the UN Security Council could consider
easing the economic restrictions.
Wang Dong,
an international relations expert at Peking University, said he expected Kim to
ask China for help in easing the sanctions in return for his pledge to
denuclearise.
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The visit
is the North Korean autocrat's third to China since March, when he made
his
inaugural foreign trip as leader. The two leaders are pictyred together
on May
|
"The
Chinese and North Korean leaders are carrying out consultations on how to
jointly move the Korean nuclear issue forward," Wang said.
China may
not have been at the table in Singapore but it retains strong influence behind
the scenes, Wang said.
Tuesday's
visit shows that "China is indispensable to the entire Korean nuclear
issue," he said.
'Differences ahead'
Trump had
hailed Kim's denuclearisation pledge as a concession. But critics said the
stock phrase long used by Pyongyang stopped short of longstanding US demands
for North Korea to give up its atomic arsenal in a "verifiable" and
"irreversible" way.
It was
urgent for Xi and Kim to discuss how North Korea would work towards meeting US
demands, said Beijing-based international relations commentator Hua Po.
"There
may be differences ahead between the DPRK (North Korea) and the US in regards
to denuclearisation, because the US wants irreversible and verifiable
denuclearisation. It may be difficult for Kim Jong Un to accept," Hua told
AFP.
"Therefore,
both China and the DPRK want to strengthen communication and form an overall
strategy to deal with the United States going forward," Hua added.
Analysts
saw the summit outcome as a sign of China's influence.
Beijing has
repeatedly called for a "suspension for suspension" approach, under
which the North would stop its nuclear and missile tests in exchange for the US
and South Korea halting military exercises.
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