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    Sunday, May 12, 2024

    Trump cancels some sanctions aimed at N. Korea, contradicting Treasury Department

    President Donald Trump sparked confusion on Friday by announcing the cancellation of sanctions aimed at North Korea that were just announced by his own Treasury Department, an apparent effort to salvage his administration's nuclear negotiations.

    "It was announced today by the U.S. Treasury that additional large scale Sanctions would be added to those already existing Sanctions on North Korea. I have today ordered the withdrawal of those additional Sanctions!" Trump tweeted Friday.

    Trump administration officials could not immediately explain which sanctions Trump was referring to because no new sanctions were announced Friday. However, the Treasury Department announced new sanctions late Thursday against two Chinese shipping companies for their alleged role in evading U.N. sanctions against North Korea.

    When asked to explain Trump's tweet, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders simply noted that "President Trump likes Chairman Kim and he doesn't think these sanctions will be necessary."

    The policy reversal appeared to expose the sharp differences within the Trump administration on North Korea policy.

    Trump has fixated on his negotiations with the rogue state after leaving his no-deal summit with Kim Jong Un in Hanoi last month, telling senators, visitors and others that he can still make a deal with North Korea - and that he believes Kim will eventually agree to his demands.

    Some of Trump's top aides, however, have been more skeptical, especially his national security adviser John Bolton, who has long preferred piling on additional sanctions to North Korea in an effort to bend the regime to Washington's will.

    Trump is determined, officials said, to prevent his aides from undercutting what he views as his biggest foreign policy accomplishments: reducing tensions with North Korea and creating the opportunity for an historic deal.

    Trump has sought to project to Kim that while some in his administration are skeptical, he is the ultimate decider and strikes a friendler posture, officials said.

    Critics said Trump's move undercut his administration's maximum pressure campaign against North Korea, though some diplomats acknowledged that the move would likely buy the president some good will with Kim just as U.S.-North Korea relations had begun to sour.

    Earlier on Friday, North Korea withdrew its officials from a liaison office with North Korea in an apparent response to the Treasury Department's sanctions announcement on Thursday.

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