North Korea says willing to hold talks
with U.S. and halt nuclear pursuit while negotiations last: South
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[March 06, 2018]
By Christine Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea is willing to
hold talks with the United States on denuclearization and will suspend
nuclear tests while those talks are under way, the South said on Tuesday
after a delegation returned from the North where it met leader Kim Jong
Un.
North and South Korea, still technically at war but enjoying a sharp
easing in tension since the Winter Olympics in the South last month,
will also hold their first summit in more than a decade next month at
the border village of Panmunjom, the head of the delegation, Chung
Eui-yong, told a media briefing.
"North Korea made clear its willingness to denuclearize the Korean
peninsula and the fact there is no reason for it to have a nuclear
programme if military threats against the North are resolved and its
regime is secure," the head of the delegation, Chung Eui-yong, told a
media briefing.
He also cited the North as saying it would not carry out nuclear or
missile tests while talks with the United States were under way. North
Korea has not carried out any such tests since November last year.
Washington and Pyongyang have been at loggerheads for months over the
North's nuclear and missile programmes, with U.S. President Donald Trump
and Kim Jong Un trading insults and threatening war. North Korea has
regularly vowed never to give up its nuclear programme, which it sees as
an essential deterrent against U.S. plans for invasion.
The United States, which stations 28,500 troops in the South, a legacy
of the Korean War, denies any such plans.
To ensure close communication, the two Koreas, whose 1950-53 conflict
ended in a mere truce, not a peace treaty, will set up a hotline between
South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Kim Jong Un, Chung said.
The last inter-Korean summit was in 2007 when late former president Roh
Moo-hyun was in office.
The agreement came on the heels of a visit made by a 10-member South
Korean delegation led by Chung to the North Korean capital, Pyongyang,
on Monday in hopes of encouraging North Korea and the United States to
talk to one another.
Kim Jong Un met senior South Korean government officials for the first
time and said it was his "firm will to vigorously advance" inter-Korean
ties and pursue reunification, the North's official news agency said.
Tensions between the two Koreas eased during the Olympics in South
Korea, where Moon hosted a high-level North Korean delegation and the
two sides presented a joint women's ice hockey team. Kim Jong Un had
invited Moon to North Korea for a summit, which was the first such
request from a North Korean leader to a South Korean president.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meets members of the special
delegation of South Korea's President in this photo released by
North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on March 6, 2018.
KCNA/via Reuters
U.S.-S.KOREA DRILLS TO GO ON
North Korea has boasted of developing nuclear-tipped missiles
capable of reaching the United States, in defiance of U.N. Security
Council resolutions, but Pyongyang and Washington both say they want
a diplomatic solution to the standoff.
The first inter-Korean talks in more than two years were held early
this year to bring North Korea to the Winter Olympics, when South
Korea and the United States also postponed an annual joint
large-scale military exercise that North Korea views as a
preparation for invasion.
During this week's visit, a senior Blue House official said North
Korea was informed it was not feasible to postpone the joint
military drills between South Korea and the United States again and
that Kim Jong Un acknowledged the situation.
Kim Jong Un said he also understood the drills, expected in April,
would be of a similar scale seen in previous years, the official
said.
The South's delegation leader, Chung, said he would travel to the
United States to explain the outcome of the visit to North Korea and
that he had a message from North Korea he will deliver to Trump.
Chung will later visit China and Russia, while Suh Hoon, the head of
South Korea's spy agency and another member of the delegation, will
head to Japan.
Both North Korea and the United States have said before they are
open to talks but the U.S. position has been that dialogue must be
aimed at North Korea's denuclearization, something Pyongyang has
rejected.
Moon has also remained vigilant against North Korea's weapons
ambitions, saying on Tuesday South Korea should bolster its defences
in tandem with talks with Pyongyang.
The Pentagon has nevertheless said it was "cautiously optimistic"
about the North-South talks, which resumed in January for the first
time in two years.
(Reporting by Christine Kim; Additional reporting by Hyonhee Shin in
SEOUL, David Brunnstrom in WASHINGTON; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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