The
visit, announced on Tuesday, comes days after North Korea fired
a ballistic missile towards the sea and amid fears of a possible
nuclear test as the Biden administration's attempts at outreach
to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un have failed.
Harris' visit, which would be the first by a senior Biden
administration official, was publicly announced by South Korean
Prime Minister Han Duck-soo during a meeting with the U.S. vice
president in Tokyo and was later confirmed by a U.S. official.
On Monday in New York, the North Korean ambassador to the United
Nations, Kim Song, accused Washington of pursuing hostile
policies that were causing a "vicious cycle of tension and
confrontation."
A U.S. aircraft carrier is in the area for joint drills with the
South Korean navy this week in what Kim called an "extremely
dangerous act" that could drive the peninsula to the brink of
war.
Harris is in the region to lead a U.S. presidential delegation
to the funeral of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on
Tuesday.
The DMZ visit will underscore the strength of the alliance
between Seoul and Washington "in the face of any threats posed"
by North Korea, said the U.S. official, who asked not to be
named discussing a trip that Harris has not officially
announced.
Harris will tour the DMZ, meet with service members, receive an
operational briefing from U.S. commanders, reflect on the shared
sacrifice of American and South Korean soldiers and reaffirm the
"ironclad" commitment to South Korean security, the official
added.
"Your visit to the DMZ and Seoul will be very symbolic
demonstrations of your strong commitments to security and peace
on the Korean Peninsula," Han said.
Several former U.S. presidents, and Biden himself before he
became president, have visited the DMZ, but former President
Donald Trump became the first to have met a North Korean leader
there when he held a third meeting with Kim Jong Un in 2019 as
part of his unsuccessful effort to persuade Kim to give up his
nuclear and missile programs.
The DMZ is often described as the world's last Cold War frontier
and has existed since the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a
armistice rather than a peace treaty.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by
Chang-Ran Kim and Josh Smith; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa
and Jacqueline Wong)
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