Vice President Pence opens door to North Korea meeting: ‘We’ll see what happens’

FAN Editor

Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday signaled openness to a possible face-to-face meeting with North Korean officials on the sidelines of the Winter Olympics this month, an encounter which would be the highest-level American contact with the rogue regime in decades.

“With regard to any interaction with the North Korean delegation, I have not requested a meeting, but we’ll see what happens,” Pence told reporters traveling with him on a week-long trip to Asia, including a visit to the Olympics in Pyeongchang.

Asked whether he would take advantage of a meeting if the opportunity presents itself, Pence reiterated that the door is open.

President Trump has said he always believes in talking, but I haven’t requested any meetings. But we’ll see what happens,” he said.

The administration dispatched Pence to lead the American delegation to the Olympics in part to counter the North Korean regime, which has sought to use the spotlight of the games to normalize its position on the global stage and soften its image.

“My message — whatever the setting, whoever is present — will be the same: And that is that North Korea must once and for all abandon its nuclear weapons program and ballistic missile ambitions,” Pence said. “It must accede to the wishes not only of nations across the region and the United States, but nations across the world, to really abandon those ambitions and enter the family of nations.”

The father of Otto Warmbier, the American college student who was imprisoned in North Korea for 17 months, will attend the Olympic ceremonies in PyeongChang as a special guest of Vice President Mike Pence, administration officials confirmed.

Pence’s comments echoed those made by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson who has also suggested a willingness to engage with North Korea around the Olympics.

“We’ll see what happens,” Tillerson said Monday while traveling in Peru when asked if the administration would accept an invitation from North Korean officials to meet in South Korea.

The nearly identical comments by Pence and Tillerson expressing openness to a meeting with the North Koreans appeared deliberate and coordinated.

Administration officials said the vice president and secretary of state had spoken several times over the past few days about the Korean issue.

“A message was being sent,” one official said of the talking point. “All it does is indicate that anything is possible.”

While the White House denies a shift in policy, it has offered mixed messages on North Korea.

Last summer, President warned the rogue regime would be met by “fire and fury” if its threats continue; he later mocked leader Jim Jong Un as “little rocket man” at the U.N.; and Trump later stoked tensions by taunting Kim over the size of his “nuclear button.” Trump has repeatedly said that talking to North Korea is “not the answer” and a “waste of time.”

More recently, Trump has softened his approach, telling South Korean President Moon Jae-in on a recent phone call of “his openness to holding talks between the U.S. and North Korea at the appropriate time, under the right circumstances,” according to the White House.

Late last year, at the height of recent tensions between the U.S. and Kim Jong Un regime, Tillerson publicly confirmed that the administration had maintained direct communication with North Korea through secret, low-level channels. “We have lines of communication to Pyongyang. We’re not in a dark situation, a blackout,” he said at the time. “We can talk to them. We do talk to them.”

And while the president has insisted any engagement be predicated on North Korea’s complete renunciation of its nuclear ambitions, Tillerson in December offered to begin direct talks “without precondition.”

“Let’s just meet and let’s – we can talk about the weather if you want,” Tillerson said.

The next day, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders released a statement to reporters saying Trump’s position on North Korea had not changed. A day after that, Tillerson himself walked his comments back in a speech at the UN Security Council, saying “North Korea must earn its way back to the table.”

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