S.Korea president-elect's team visits U.S. with eye on early Biden
summit
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[April 04, 2022]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - A team of foreign policy and security advisers to
South Korea's president-elect Yoon Suk-yeol is visiting the United
States this week, seeking to help engineer a early summit with President
Joe Biden and coordinate efforts to rein in North Korea's intensifying
weapons tests, sources said on Monday.
Conservative outsider Yoon won the March 9 election and is working to
map out his foreign policy agenda ahead of his swearing in on May 10,
just as tension is flaring in the wake of North Korea's launch last
month of a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
Yoon had vowed to ramp up defense capability to counter the North's
threats, including by buying an additional new THAAD U.S. missile
system, but left the door open for dialogue.
A seven-strong delegation led by Park Jin, a four-term lawmaker of
Yoon's People Power Party (PPP), and former vice foreign minister Cho
Tae-yong arrived in Washington for talks with U.S. officials,
politicians and academics. Both Park and Cho are being floated as strong
candidates to be foreign minister in Yoon's cabinet.
Topping their agenda is a push for a potential summit in Seoul between
Yoon and Biden as early as May when Biden visits Japan for a meeting of
the Quad group, which also includes Australia and India, two sources
familiar with the team's plan and involved in Yoon's foreign policy
deliberations told Reuters.
The date of the Quad conference has not yet been announced, but local
elections in Australia and Japan, expected in May and July respectively,
are complicating Biden's earlier plans for a May trip, one of the
sources said.
Australia Prime Minister Scott Morrison must call a federal election by
May 21 but has yet to finalize a date. Japanese Prime Minister Fumio
Kishida also faces a crucial election for the upper house of parliament
in July, as a victory could ensure several election-free, politically
stable years to pursue his policy goals.
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South Korea's president-elect Yoon Suk-yeol speaks during a news
conference to address his relocation plans of the presidential
office, at his transition team office, in Seoul, South Korea, March
20, 2022.Jung Yeon-je/Pool via REUTERS
"My understanding is that the Japan
side had asked for holding the Quad summit in late April so that
they can have enough time to prep for the election," the source said
on condition of anonymity due to diplomatic sensitivity.
"But the best time for us is somewhere between
those two elections, possibly around late May, and Washington would
also want to talk to the new president rather than being here before
he takes office."
An early summit has become all the more important due to North
Korea's March 24 missile launch - its first full ICBM test since
2017 - which prompted Yoon to revive a scrapped plan to send envoys
to Washington, the source said.
There are also growing signs that Pyongyang could soon test a
nuclear weapon for the first time since 2017, after leader Kim Jong
Un threatened to break his self-imposed moratorium on ICBM and
nuclear testing.
But when asked if the team would discuss Yoon's pledge of a THAAD
battery purchase, the source said that cannot be ruled out but is
"not a priority" and they have "no reason to rush."
Park, arriving in Washington on Sunday, told reporters that his
group would explore a "concrete roadmap" for North Korea's
denuclearization.
Park said a Yoon-Biden summit would "naturally happen" if Biden
visits Asia as expected, but declined to elaborate.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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