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Updated: Jun 02, 2018 22:59 IST

US President Donald Trump has said his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un will take place on June 12 in Singapore as scheduled, but tamped down expectations by calling it a “beginning” of a process in which follow-ups may be needed.

Trump had called off the talks in May, accusing Pyongyang of “tremendous anger and open hostility,” but left the door open should the North Korean leader change his mind. A flurry of diplomatic activity since then showed both sides were keen for the summit to take place.

“Now we’re going to deal, and we’re going to really start a process,” Trump told reporters after meeting Kim’s emissary Kim Yong Chol at the White House on Friday. “We’re meeting with the chairman on June 12th. And I think it’s probably going to be a very successful -- ultimately, a successful process.”

Stressing the need to dial down expectations, he added: “It will be a beginning. I don’t say and I’ve never said it happens in one meeting. You’re talking about years of hostility; years of problems; years of, really, hatred between so many different nations. But I think you’re going to have a very positive result in the end.”

The president indicated there may be more follow-up summits. “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we walked out and everything was settled all of a sudden from sitting down for a couple of hours? No, I don’t see that happening. But I see over a period of time.”

The emissary, who is a former spy chief, also delivered Trump a letter from Chairman Kim in an outsized envelope, which the two of them posed with for pictures. Trump said it was a “very nice letter” and a “very interesting letter” but admitted he had yet to read it. Trump met the North Korean official for around 90 minutes and said they discussed a range of issues from denuclearisation to sanctions. Asked if Kim was committed to denuclearisation, Trump said, “I do think so. He’d like to see it happen. He wants to be careful. ...He’s not going to run and do things.

“But I told him, to be honest with you, look, we have sanctions on; they’re very powerful sanctions. We would not take sanctions off unless they did that.”

The two countries do not see denuclearisation the same way, and that was one reason for the rise in rhetoric recently that led to Trump calling off the summit.

American national security advisor John Bolton and Vice-President Mike Pence spoke of the model followed by Libya, which gave up its nuclear weapons programme in 2003, and its leader Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown in 2011.

An angry Pyongyang had reacted sharply to the suggestions. Notably, both Pence and Bolton were not in the meeting between Trump and Kim, the North Korean official, on Friday. Secretary of state Mike Pompeo, who has been US lead on these talks, was there.