North Korea willing to take part in talks if US has 'right attitude'

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Close-in shot of Kim Jong-UnImage source, KCNA via Reuters
Image caption,

Mr Kim made the comments at the 14th Supreme People's Assembly in Pyongyang

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has said he would take part in a third summit with Donald Trump - but only if the US brought the "right attitude".

North Korean state media reported the comments by Mr Kim on Saturday.

He urged Mr Trump to pursue a deal that was "mutually acceptable." In response the president tweeted praise of Mr Kim and welcomed the idea of a new summit.

The two leaders first met in Singapore last year. However, a second summit in Hanoi in February broke down.

Mr Trump said then North Korean officials had wanted economic sanctions lifted in their entirety in exchange for disabling a major nuclear site, provoking him to walk away.

However, the North Koreans disputed the US account.

In his most recent comments, Mr Kim said in a speech that the summit had created a "strong doubt" in him over whether the US genuinely wanted to improve relations.

But he went on to say: "We are willing to give another try if the US offers to have a third summit with the right attitude and mutually acceptable terms."

He said the US "mistakenly believe that if they pressure us to the maximum, they can subdue us" and called on them to cease "hostile" negotiating tactics.

Media caption,

BBC's Laura Bicker explains why Trump is the 'biggest loser' from the summit

He did, however, add that his personal ties with Mr Trump remained "excellent".

The North Korean leader said he would give the US until the end of the year to make a "courageous decision" over any new summit plans.

The US president responded by heaping praise on Mr Kim in tweets noting the potential for "extraordinary growth" under his leadership.

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Last month, Vice Foreign Minister Choe Sun-hui accused the US of taking a "gangster-like" stance and said it had thrown away a "golden opportunity" in Hanoi.

Kim Dong-yup, of Kyungnam University's Institute for Far Eastern Studies in South Korea, told Reuters Mr Kim's remarks signalled he would not cling to talks with the US forever and could instead look "to diversify its diplomatic relations with other countries".

The comments come just one day after Mr Trump, at the start of talks in Washington with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, floated the possibility of further meetings with Mr Kim.