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		North Korea's Kim offers rare praise for South's departing Moon
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		 [April 22, 2022] 
		By Hyonhee Shin 
 SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim 
		Jong Un has thanked South Korea's outgoing president for trying to 
		improve relations, a rare gesture of goodwill but one that analysts said 
		may not be enough to head off growing tension between the two Koreas.
 
 The warm words from North Korea to President Moon Jae-in came in an 
		exchange of letters less than three weeks before Moon leaves office to 
		be replaced by a conservative leader who has already signalled a tougher 
		line on North Korea
 
 Analysts were sceptical that North Korea's message heralded a broader 
		improvement in relations, and warned that the praise for Moon could be a 
		bid to portray his successor, Yoon Suk-yeol, as responsible for any 
		further deterioration in ties.
 
 North Korean state media was the first to report the exchange and the 
		unexpected North Korean plaudits for the stalled effort by Moon and his 
		liberal administration to engage.
 
 "Kim Jong Un appreciated the pains and effort taken by Moon Jae-in for 
		the great cause of the nation until the last days of his term of 
		office," North Korea's KCNA state news agency reported.
 
 The exchange of letters was an "expression of their deep trust", it 
		said.
 
		
		 
		The letters come against a backdrop of tension since a failed North 
		Korea-U.S. summit in 2019, exacerbated last month when North Korea 
		launched intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), ending a 
		self-imposed 2017 moratorium.
 Moon sent a letter on Wednesday and promised to try to lay a foundation 
		for unification based on joint declarations reached at summits in 2018, 
		despite the "difficult situation", KCNA said.
 
 Moon's office confirmed that he had exchanged "letters of friendship" 
		with Kim.
 
 Moon said the "era of confrontation" should be overcome with dialogue, 
		and inter-Korean engagement was now a task for the next administration, 
		his spokeswoman told a briefing. Moon also expressed hope for the swift 
		resumption of U.S.-North Korea denuclearisation talks.
 
 Kim said in his reply on Thursday that their "historic" summits gave the 
		people "hope for the future", and the two agreed that ties would develop 
		if both sides "make tireless efforts with hope", KCNA reported.
 
 PRETEXT FOR BLAME?
 
 The exchange came as U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Sung 
		Kim was in South Korea for talks. The U.S. envoy has said he is open to 
		sitting down with the North at any time without preconditions, but it 
		was unclear whether Moon's letter specifically proposed a meeting.
 
 Analysts questioned the North's true intentions.
 
 "This looks more like another step in building the pretext to blame Yoon 
		for more escalation from North Korea, rather than an olive branch to 
		Yoon or Biden," said Markus Garlauskas, a senior fellow with the 
		Atlantic Council think tank and former U.S. national intelligence 
		officer for North Korea.
 
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			North Korean leader Kim Jong Un gestures as he watches the 
			test-firing of a new-type tactical guided weapon according to state 
			media, North Korea, in this undated photo released on April 16, 2022 
			by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). KCNA via REUTERS 
            
			 Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the 
			University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said the letters could 
			signal to Yoon that the door for cooperation was still open, and a 
			potential seventh nuclear test by the North or any other future 
			action would hinge on Yoon's approach.
 Yoon, who takes office on May 10, has said that he is open to 
			dialogue but greater military deterrence and a stronger U.S. 
			alliance are needed to counter the North's "provocations".
 
 Kwon Young-se, Yoon's nominee to oversee cross-border affairs, said 
			the exchange of letters was a "good thing" and Kim offered 
			"positive" views on inter-Korean ties.
 
 "There was some content that the new government would want to hear," 
			he told reporters. "It was very positive that he does not negatively 
			see trust and progress in relations."
 
 Tension escalated when North Korea last month conducted its first 
			full ICBM test since 2017, and there are concerns that it is 
			preparing to restart nuclear testing.
 
 LEGACY AT STAKE
 
 Moon staked his legacy on improving inter-Korean ties and helped 
			arrange unprecedented meetings between Kim Jong Un and then U.S. 
			President Donald Trump in 2018 and 2019.
 
 Three summits Kim and Moon held in 2018 promised peace and 
			reconciliation but relations have soured, with the North warning of 
			destructive action and demolishing facilities built by South Korean 
			firms for joint projects.
 
 In 2020, the North spectacularly blew up a joint liaison office on 
			the border, which Moon's government had spent 9.78 billion won ($8.6 
			million) renovating.
 
 The two leaders tried again to mend ties last year but little 
			progress was made and Pyongyang then criticised Seoul's "double 
			standards" over weapons.
 
			
			 North Korea's statement left open a possibility for Moon to play a 
			role as envoy, but Christopher Green, a Korea specialist at Leiden 
			University in the Netherlands, said it was unlikely to have a 
			positive impact on his reputation. 
 The statement could stir controversy in the South by portraying Moon 
			as "a deluded peacenik who, after all the weapons tests North Korea 
			has conducted in the last eight months, is still writing convivial 
			letters to Kim", Green said.
 
 (Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Josh Smith and 
			Joori Roh; Editing by Stephen Coates, Gerry Doyle, Robert Birsel)
 
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