U.S. President Donald Trump warned Tuesday his landmark summit with Kim Jong Un may be delayed, but insisted the North Korean leader is "serious" about denuclearization.
Hosting South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the White House, Trump did little to quell speculation about the wavering prospects of a historic first summit between U.S. and North Korean leaders.
"It may not work out for June 12," Trump said of the Singapore meeting, adding in a now familiar non-committal riff: "if it does not happen, maybe it will happen later."
"There are certain conditions we want to happen. I think we'll get those conditions. And if we don't, we won't have the meeting," he said.
Politically, Trump has invested heavily in the success of the meeting, so most U.S. officials, as well as outside observers, privately expect it will go ahead.
But as the date draws near, Trump's divergence from his top aides, the differences between the two sides and the astronomically high stakes are coming into sharp relief.
Success could lead to peace on the Korean peninsula and end the threat of a nuclear conflagration. Failure could all but destroy hopes of a peaceful solution to the crisis.
"You never know about deals," Trump said. "I've made a lot of deals. You never really know."
North Korea's willingness to denuclearize - the very basis for the talks - was recently plunged into doubt when the government denounced U.S. demands for "unilateral nuclear abandonment."
Pyongyang also canceled at the last minute a high-level meeting with the South in protest over joint military drills between Seoul and Washington.
Despite the North's move, Trump said he believes Kim is willing to give up nukes. "I do think he is serious. I think he is absolutely very serious," the U.S. president said.
He suggested that the North Korean leader's apparent about-face may have been at the behest of Chinese President Xi Jinping.
"There was a difference when Kim Jong Un left China the second time," Trump said. "There was a different attitude after that meeting and I was a little surprised.
"And I think things changed after that meeting so I can't say that I am happy about it."
And Trump again raised the prospect of a windfall for Kim if he mothballs weapons programs. The North Korean leader "will be extremely happy" if the deal works out, Trump said. "He will be very happy."
Rescue mission
Moon's trip to the White House represented an effort to salvage the rare diplomatic opening.
The dovish Moon deployed a tactic frequently used by foreign leaders who meet this most mercurial of presidents: flattery.
"Thanks to your vision of achieving peace through strength as well as your strong leadership," Moon said in the Oval Office, "we find ourselves standing one step closer to the dream of achieving denuclearization on the Korean peninsula."
"All this was possible because of you, Mr President," Moon added, taking pains to stress the concrete results of diplomacy so far - most notably the release of three U.S. prisoners from North Korean jail.
Trump praised his guest, but also indicated that a separate, second round of high-level talks between Moon and Kim may also be on ice. "Right now, he doesn't know whether or not he has a meeting," Trump said of Moon.
South Korea - deeply worried about Kim's bellicose weapons testing and Trump's similarly aggressive warnings about "fire and fury" - was instrumental in convincing the two Cold War foes to sit down and talk.
Moon sent his own national security advisor to the White House in March, carrying an offer of talks and word that North Korea may be willing to abandon nuclear weapons, an enticing prospect.
Trump surprised his guests, his own aides and the world by summarily accepting the meeting, seeing an opportunity to "do a deal" and avoid military confrontation.
Analysts saw North Korea's perceived slow peddling as evidence of what they feared all along, that Pyongyang may have been playing for time - hoping to ease sanctions and "maximum pressure," or of South Korea over torquing the prospects of a deal.
"The current episode of tension reflects a wide and dangerous expectation gap between the United States and North Korea," said Eric Gomez of the CATO Institute.
"Denuclearization is not off the table for the North, but it expects the United States to end the so-called 'hostile policy' as a precondition for denuclearization."
It is far from clear what that means concretely, but it could include the withdrawal of 30,000 U.S. troops from the Korean peninsula.
Trump has been similarly unclear about his own policy.
He indicated the United States may not demand North Korea give up its nuclear program before getting sanctions relief - a sequencing he said was a fatal flaw of the Iran nuclear deal he scrapped.
"It would certainly be better if it were all in one. Does it have to be? I don't think I'm going to totally commit myself," Trump said.
Pyongyang is on the verge of marrying nuclear and missile technology ,allowing it to hit the continental United States with a nuke, a capability Washington has said is wholly unacceptable.
Administration officials refused to speculate on when Trump would make a decision on the summit.
"We are prepared," said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, saying Trump had asked them to follow through with preparations.
"I'm not a betting man. I wouldn't care to predict whether it would happen, only to predict that we'll be ready in the event that it does."