China sending diplomat to N. Korea

Envoy is expected to pressure Kim to curb nuke program, resume talks

BEIJING -- China will send a high-level diplomat to North Korea for the first time in two years, China's state-run news agency said Wednesday, in a move that comes days after President Donald Trump's visit and analysts expect will resume pressure on the North to curb its nuclear arms program.

The head of the Communist Party's external affairs department, Song Tao, is scheduled to leave for Pyongyang on Friday, Xinhua reported. The official announcement said that Song would inform North Korea of the results of the 19th Communist Party congress last month that reappointed President Xi Jinping to a second term.

Xinhua also reported that Song would "visit" the north, a phrasing that Chinese specialists on international relations called an oblique way of saying Song would carry a message from Xi. They said the message would most likely urge the North to join negotiations to halt its nuclear program, and convey the contents of Xi's discussions with Trump about North Korea.

Last week in Beijing, the talks between Xi and Trump focused heavily on North Korea. After he left Beijing, Trump tweeted that he was impressed with China's efforts to push for the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. But it was unclear whether Xi had promised to take any new steps, as denuclearization has long been China's policy goal there.

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"I believe Song Tao will take a very clear message on the Trump summit with Xi Jinping," said Cheng Xiaohe, professor of international relations at Renmin University of China in Beijing. "He will focus on North Korea needing to talk about denuclearization."

North Korea's Korean Central News Agency on Wednesday confirmed Song's trip, a signal that after month's of rebuffing Chinese attempts to send envoys to Pyongyang, the government of North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, had agreed to Song's visit.

But expectations were muted about whether the visit could move Kim to negotiate.

There is no guarantee that Song will see Kim in person, said Yang Xiyu, a Chinese diplomat who led the so-called six-party talks with North Korea more than a decade ago. He noted that it was most likely that the North Korean leader would only be willing to negotiate after conducting another missile test of the kind that has shaken the world this year.

"I am afraid that Kim will do something more terrible and will come to the negotiating table only after a big intercontinental ballistic missile test," Yang said. "Then Kim will talk from a position of power."

The last senior Chinese official to visit North Korea, Liu Yunshan, then a member of the elite Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party, appeared with Kim on the reviewing stand at a military parade in Pyongyang in October 2015. Liu made no headway then in curbing the North's nuclear weapons expansion, and he retired last month.

A lull in nuclear tests by North Korea since September has led to speculation, particularly in the South, that the North may be open to negotiations. Briefings to North Korea's ruling Workers' Party after China party congresses -- held every five years -- are routine.

The party officials who went to Pyongyang five and 10 years ago were of more senior rank than Song, though this time Song's mission is broader than a mere tally of last month's proceedings, Yang said.

Information for this article was contributed by Hyung-Jin Kim of The Associated Press.

A Section on 11/16/2017

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