South Korea's Moon seeks urgency on N.Korea, vaccine deal at Biden
summit
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[May 18, 2021]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean President
Moon Jae-in is hoping to use his first summit with U.S. President Joe
Biden this week to revive long-stalled talks with North Korea and urge
the White House to embrace the issue with more urgency.
South Korean officials say they were heartened by the new
administration's recent policy review, which called for a focus on
practical diplomatic steps to reduce tensions while maintaining the
final goal of removing North Korea's nuclear weapons.
But amid the global coronavirus pandemic, domestic economic and
political challenges, and foreign policy crises elsewhere, the Biden
administration has not signalled North Korea is a top priority,
potentially complicating Moon's hopes of cementing his legacy.
Moon is scheduled to arrive in Washington on Thursday for a four-day
stay, which will include a series of summits with Biden and meetings
with Vice U.S. President Kamala Harris and congressional leaders.
One senior Seoul official said the Biden administration's overtures to
North Korea were a "good sign" that could lay the groundwork for a
resumption of talks.
"We believe there could be a serious attempt at reopening dialogue and
both sides could actually sit face to face at some point," the official
told Reuters on condition of anonymity, citing diplomatic sensitivity.
"We of course hope it will happen sooner than later, and do what we can
to facilitate that."
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said Washington is open to
diplomacy but it was "up to North Korea to decide whether it wants to
engage" by taking action toward denuclearisation.
Denuclearisation talks between Pyongyang and Washington have been on
hold since the failed second summit in 2019 between leader Kim Jong Un,
and Biden's predecessor, Donald Trump. That led to souring inter-Korean
relations as Moon had offered to play a mediator role.
Pyongyang officials consistently criticise and ridicule Moon and his
government, and last year North Korea blew up a cross-border liaison
office built on its territory, though it has not tested nuclear weapons
or long-range missiles since 2017.
Moon has said he will treat his final year in office as the last chance
to achieve lasting peace with North Korea, and is seeking to explore
ways with Biden to restart nuclear negotiations, Seoul officials said.
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South Korea's President Moon Jae-in delivers a speech during the
opening ceremony of the 21st National Assembly, in Seoul, South
Korea July 16, 2020. Jung Yeon-je/Pool via REUTERS
Biden's administration has not shown a willingness to
ease sanctions, while making diplomatic overtures that Washington
says have been rebuffed by Pyongyang. The North has long demanded
sanctions relief, an issue that has also hampered Moon's efforts to
kick-start inter-Korean economic and tourism projects.
Biden has yet to appoint a special envoy to handle nuclear
negotiations, and signalled a hard line on North Korea's human
rights.
But South Korean officials have seized on the policy review as a
reason for optimism.
"The United States has said it would pursue a diplomatic solution
and bilateral dialogue, and was ready to offer concessions if North
Korea takes meaningful steps, which is a very practical and flexible
approach," a senior presidential official told reporters on Tuesday.
Moon's efforts at salvaging inter-Korean ties could be overshadowed
by mounting calls on him to secure more and faster deliveries of
U.S.-made coronavirus vaccines amid supply shortages and shipment
delays.
With the slowing inoculation drive further denting his popularity,
Moon promised on Monday to secure a vaccine partnership at the
summit by harnessing South Korea's biotech production capacity.
"Moon's administration could've thought of this summit as a chance
to jointly devise concrete steps to flesh out the (U.S.-North Korea)
policy framework from the review, but there are too many issues that
require a more immediate focus for both sides, including vaccine and
economic cooperation," said Kim Hong-kyun, a former South Korean
chief nuclear negotiator.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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