The Phnom Penh Post

S Korea’s Moon to continue nuclear talks with Pyongyang

- Sunghee Hwang

SOUTH Korean President Moon Jae-in travels to Pyongyang this week for his third summit with Kim Jong Un, looking to break the deadlock in nuclear talks between North Korea and the United States.

Moon flies north tomorrow for a three-day trip, following in the footsteps of his predecesso­rs Kim Daejung in 2000 and mentor Roh Moohyun in 2007.

No details of the programme have been announced but Pyongyang is likely to pull out all the stops to create a good impression, with tens of thousands of people lining the streets to welcome him.

One diplomatic source predicted the visit would see “Kim and Moon together receiving the same sort of applause”.

But while the summit at the Panmunjom border truce village was high on headline-grabbing symbolism, with Moon stepping briefly into the North and the two sharing an extended oneto-one woodland chat, pressure is mounting for substantiv­e progress.

Moon, who met Kim again in May, was instrument­al in brokering the historic summit the following month between US President Donald Trump and Kim in Singapore, when Kim backed denucleari­sation of the “Korean peninsula”.

But no details were agreed and Washington and Pyongyang have sparred since over what that means and how it will be achieved.

At the same time the US and South have sometimes moved at radically different speeds in their approach to the North.

Moon will try again to “play the role of facilitato­r or mediator”, said his special adviser on foreign affairs Moon Chung-in.

“He believes that improved interKorea­n relations have some role in facilitati­ng US-DPRK talks as well as solving the North Korean nuclear problem,” he told reporters, using the North’s official acronym.

Last month Trump abruptly cancelled a planned v isit by Secretar y of State Mike Pompeo to Pyong yang, after the North condemned “gangster-like” demands for what it ca lled its unilatera l disarmamen­t.

Washington has been adamant that the North carry out a “final, fully verified denucleari­sation” first, while Pyongyang is demanding a formal declaratio­n from the US that the Korean War is over.

But Kim has since sent Trump a letter seeking a second summit and held a military parade for his country’s 70th birthday without showing off any interconti­nental ballistic missiles, prompting warm tweets from the US president.

North Korea will want to exploit Trump’s eagerness to declare progress before the US mid-term elections in November to secure concession­s, said Go Myong-hyun, an analyst at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, and will view “every meeting as a viable political opportunit­y” towards that goal.

But whether Pyongyang is willing to offer something concrete in return is yet to be seen.

Moon may try to convince the North Korean leader to verbally commit to providing a list of the country’s existing nuclear programme, said Shin Beom-cheol, another analyst at the Asan Institute.

“It won’t be South Korea that inspects and verifies, so if we can get something out of Kim Jong Un’s mouth, that will be significan­t,” Shin said, adding the next step could be a summit between Kim and Trump sometime in October.

‘Radical initiative’

Despite the deadlock in denucleari­sation talks, since the Panmunjom summit the two Koreas have sought to pursue joint projects in multiple fields.

But North Korea is under several different sets of sanctions for its nuclear and missile programmes, complicati­ng Moon’s desire to promote crossborde­r economic schemes.

The dovish South Korean president is taking several South Korean business tycoons with him to the North, including Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong and the vice chairman of the Hyundai Motor Group, whose founder was a wartime refugee from the North.

“He is sending a message to the North to speedily complete denucleari­sation, conclude talks with the US so that South Korea can begin fullfledge­d economic cooperatio­n,” said analyst Go.

And special advisor Moon Chung-in added that the South Korean president could look to persuade Kim to come up with a “somewhat radical and bold initiative”, such as dismantlin­g some nuclear bombs, and press the US for reciprocal measures.

“And the United States should be willing to come up with major economic easing of economic sanctions,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (left) and South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in (right) pose for a photo at a signing ceremony at the Panmunjom truce village on April 29.
AFP North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (left) and South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in (right) pose for a photo at a signing ceremony at the Panmunjom truce village on April 29.

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