[In
an unusual statement released to reporters on Tuesday evening, the press
secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, said Mr. Trump’s position on North Korea had not changed — namely, that talks were
pointless if the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, continued to menace his neighbors.]
By Mark Landler
WASHINGTON — President Trump and Secretary of State Rex
W. Tillerson are once again at odds over how to deal with nuclear-armed North
Korea after Mr. Tillerson declared on Tuesday that the United States was ready
to open talks with the North “without precondition.”
The
secretary’s comments were remarkably conciliatory for an administration that
has repeatedly threatened North Korea with military action if it did not curb its
missile and nuclear programs. And the White House waited only a few hours
before distancing itself from the remarks.
In
an unusual statement released to reporters on Tuesday evening, the press
secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, said Mr. Trump’s position on North Korea had not changed — namely, that talks were
pointless if the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, continued to menace his neighbors.
“North Korea is acting in an unsafe way not only toward Japan , China , and South Korea , but the entire world,” she said. “North Korea ’s actions are not good for anyone and
certainly not good for North Korea .”
It
was only the latest example of a public rift between the president and his
chief diplomat over North Korea .
In
October, Mr. Trump tweeted that Mr. Tillerson was “wasting his time” trying to
open diplomatic lines to Pyongyang . But this time, the comments follow reports that the White House
is laying the groundwork for the secretary’s departure from the State
Department and his replacement by Mike Pompeo, the C.I.A. director.
White
House officials were alarmed by Mr. Tillerson’s remarks, according to several
people, fearing that they would sow confusion among allies after Mr. Trump
rallied them behind a policy of “maximum pressure.”
Mr.
Tillerson was speaking to the Atlantic Council in what was billed as a wrap-up
of foreign-policy challenges in the administration’s first year.
Asked
about the prospects for diplomacy with the North, he said, “We’re ready to talk
anytime North
Korea
would like to talk, and we’re ready to have the first meeting without
precondition.”
“Let’s
just meet and let’s — we can talk about the weather if you want,” he continued.
“We can talk about whether it’s going to be a square table or a round table, if
that’s what you’re excited about. But can we at least sit down and see each
other face to face?”
To
some extent, Mr. Tillerson was merely playing the role he has played throughout
the administration’s confrontation with North Korea — the diplomat offering a
softer line — while Mr. Trump and other White House officials warn about the
consequences if North Korea does not back off.
But
Mr. Tillerson indicated an urgency about getting to the table with North Korea , which officials said runs counter to the
White House’s view that negotiations are unlikely to happen soon, given Mr. Kim’s
repeated tests of nuclear devices and ballistic missiles.
Mr.
Tillerson did say that talks would only make sense if North Korea paused those tests.
Still,
his statements reverberated in Beijing , where South Korea ’s president, Moon Jae-in, was meeting with
Chinese leaders about North Korea .
Russia
welcomed Mr. Tillerson’s remarks, saying they were an improvement over “the
confrontational rhetoric we have heard so far,” according to Dmitri Peskov, a
spokesman for President Vladimir V. Putin.
Adding
to the muddled messages, Mr. Tillerson spoke a few hours after the national
security adviser, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, offered a more hard-line version of
the administration’s policy. He warned that time was running out to avoid a
military confrontation with North Korea, and that China needed to do more to
squeeze the North economically.
Speaking
at a conference sponsored by a British think tank, Policy Exchange, General
McMaster singled out shipping companies that he said were smuggling goods to North Korea and helping it evade sanctions.
“A
company whose ships would engage in that activity ought to be on notice that
that might be the last delivery of anything they do for a long time, anywhere,”
he said.
General
McMaster has been among the most hard-line among administration officials in
his approach to North Korea, raising the prospect of preventive military
strikes if the North appeared on the verge of launching a nuclear-tipped
missile capable of reaching the United States.
Mr.
Tillerson, by contrast, has continued to push for openings to the North Korea — a strategy that people who know him said
is rooted in his successful effort to free a detained American college student,
Otto F. Warmbier, to the United States . Mr. Warmbier died days after his return
from injuries sustained during his imprisonment in Pyongyang .
Analysts
said there was nothing wrong with Mr. Tillerson’s emphasis on diplomacy, but
that the conditions for any negotiation were critical. The United States has insisted that North Korea must relinquish its nuclear arsenal, which
the North has steadfastly refused to do.
“There’s
a middle ground between setting ridiculous preconditions for negotiations, and
accepting North
Korea ’s
terms,” said Daniel R. Russel, who served as assistant secretary of state for
East Asian affairs in the Obama administration. “It’s very important that we
not appear to be accepting North Korea ’s terms for negotiations.”
Michael
J. Green, a National Security Council official in the George W. Bush
administration, said, “some communication and consultation with North Korea is appropriate. But there’s a big difference
between that and a dramatic announcement about negotiations.”