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Kim-Xi summit sends signal to Trump

Beijing: Beijing wants this week's surprise China-North Korea summit to send the message to Washington that China remains crucial to a Korean Peninsula solution before the North's Kim Jong Un holds a historic meeting with President Donald Trump, analysts say.
Chinese President Xi Jinping wants to protect Beijing's strategic interests and ensure it has a voice in the process, particularly when it comes to maintaining a friendly regime in Pyongyang as a buffer from the US and South Korea forces stationed across the 38th parallel. Just a day after Kim's visit, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived in North Korea on Wednesday to finalize details for Trump's summit with Kim.
Kim meanwhile registered his desire for Chinese support in the talks, particularly his call for a "phased and synchronous" approach to denuclearization, as opposed to Trump's demand for an immediate end to its nuclear programs.
"I think Xi wants to head-off a surprise outcome from the Trump-Kim summit," said Bonnie Glaser, senior adviser for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.
Xi and Kim held talks Monday and Tuesday in the northern Chinese port of Dalian, the second time they've met in just over a month following Kim's unannounced trip to Beijing in late March. That was his first overseas visit since taking power six years ago and a powerful sign of the enduring relationship between the communist neighbors despite years of fraying ties.
The Dalian summit was also significant in that Xi was expected to visit Pyongyang prior to Kim returning to China, showing that Kim has finally agreed to accept the role of "junior partner" in the relationship after a lengthy period of strained relations, said Michael Mazza of the American Enterprise Institute think tank in Washington, D.C.
Amid tranquil scenes of the two leaders chatting beside deep blue ocean waters and strolling through lush gardens, state media quoted Xi as telling Kim that China "supports North Korea to stick to denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and supports North Korea and the U.S. in solving the peninsula issue through dialogue and consultation." Kim said North Korea remains committed to denuclearization and has no need to possess nuclear weapons if a "relevant party" drops its "hostile policy and security threats" against it, a clear reference to the United States.
The exact time and location of Kim's meeting with Trump have not yet been announced. US officials say besides working on those details, Pompeo will also press North Korea for the release of three detained American citizens, whose imminent release Trump has been hinting at. His trip comes just days after North Korea expressed displeasure with Washington for comments suggesting that massive U.S. pressure had pushed Kim to the negotiating table.
Trump discussed the summit in Dalian with Xi in a phone call Tuesday, along with "recent developments on the Korean Peninsula," the White House said. "President Trump and President Xi agreed on the importance of continued implementation of sanctions on North Korea until it permanently dismantles its nuclear and missile programs," it
said.
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