[³ìÃë:¶ó¿îÁî ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°I would look at what¡¯s been offered. I don¡¯t know what the negotiations have in mind right now. But, clearly, there would have be obvious steps forward in terms of denuclearization. It would have to be substantive in nature where they are clear, not just promises, but actual actions taking place.¡±
[³ìÃë:¶ó¿îÁî ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°They are going to have to declare their nuclear capabilities, their nuclear assets. That¡¯s a part of it and it¡¯s got to be verifiable. It cannot simply be a ¡®we-have-the-following¡¯. It has to be verified.¡±
[³ìÃë:¶ó¿îÁî ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°It will depend on what the steps are. Certainly, there are incentives that can be allowed. Look, we would rather not have a war, so we have interests though in having nuclear-free peninsular. And, talking is one thing but actual actions are another. We¡¯ve talked for years. We need to see some actions on the part of North Korea that say that they are actually moving towards denuclearization and they are starting to make actual progress.¡±
[³ìÃë:¹ê Ȧ·± ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°First of all, ultimately, they would have to get rid of their nuclear weapons and their ability to generate nuclear materials. So, they would have to totally denuclearize. In order to get full sanctions relief, they have to denuclearize.¡±
[³ìÃë:ºê¶ó¿î ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°I don¡¯t think the question now is sanctions relief for North Korea. I¡¯ve not seen what signs that they¡¦I mean I think they would get sanctions relief if they began to act responsibly as it¡¯s in the world opinion, but they are not doing that.¡±
[³ìÃë:ºê¶ó¿î ÀÇ¿ø] ¡°The path to pass our Otto Warmbier Act, the bill I introduced with others, I think we should move on that. I¡¯m not sure if the administration wants us to do. I¡¯m not sure. I mean I¡¯m hopeful that the administration is serious about the negotiations now.¡±