WASHINGTON — Bipartisan legislation introduced Tuesday calls for stringent congressional oversight of U.S. nuclear diplomacy with North Korea and any deal President Donald Trump strikes with Kim Jong Un.
It comes two weeks after Trump met Kim at a historic summit in Singapore that yielded a North Korean commitment to the “complete denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula but failed to spell how that goal, which has eluded past U.S. administrations, would be achieved and how long it might take.
“After the administration signed a vague joint statement in Singapore without any details on a pathway forward on denuclearization, the need for congressional oversight is more evident than ever,” Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, top-ranking Democrat in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement.
The legislation, co-sponsored by Republican Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado, who chairs an Asia subcommittee, calls for the president to submit a report on how the diplomatic negotiations with North Korea are expected to proceed, with continual written updates every 30 days. It also demands continued sanctions until there’s “meaningful and verifiable denuclearization” and for the U.S. not to pursue military action against the North contrary to international law.