China Daily (Hong Kong)

US, DPRK consider exchanging envoys

- By PAN MENGQI panmengqi@chinadaily.com.cn

The United States is considerin­g setting up a liaison office in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, a symbolic move that analysts said could show how relations between Washington and Pyongyang have seriously begun to thaw.

A Monday report from CNN quoted a top US official, saying that Washington wants a senior diplomat in Pyongyang to set up the office, which would serve as US quasi-embassy but with strippeddo­wn functions. The hope is that the DPRK, in return, would send its own envoys to the US.

It would be the first major step toward establishi­ng diplomatic relations between the two nations.

Establishi­ng new bilateral relations was one of the commitment­s made by US President Donald Trump and DPRK’s top leader Kim Jong-un at their first summit in Singapore in June. The pair are expected to focus on fleshing out Kim’s commitment to complete denucleari­zation through correspond­ing measures from the US in their second summit scheduled in Vietnam next week.

Meanwhile, the Republic of Korea’s Yonhap News agency, citing a diplomatic source on Tuesday, said a liaison office alone may be insufficie­nt to draw more concession­s from the DPRK.

“Pyongyang doesn’t regard an end-of-war declaratio­n or the installati­on of a liaison office as a correspond­ing measure of equal worth as the dismantlem­ent of its Yongbyon nuclear facility,” the source said.

Lee Hae-chan, head of the ROK’s ruling Democratic Party, also told reporters in Washington that the DPRK appears more interested in economic concession­s, such as relief from internatio­nal sanctions, the reopening of an inter-Korean industrial complex and the resumption of tours to its scenic Mount Kumgang.

“A liaison office would go hand in hand with an end-of-war declaratio­n, but my guess is that they come later on the list of (the DPRK’s) priorities,” he said.

Shi Yuanhua, a professor of Korean Peninsula Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said with the momentum and incentives from both sides to make concrete steps toward peace, the news of exchanging liaison officers would be a strong gesture showing that both Pyongyang and Washington want to continue peace talks at all levels.

“It is a symbolic gesture to demonstrat­e the US-DPRK relations have improved. But the question now, though, is if Trump and Kim will actually reach a deal in Vietnam on Feb 27 and 28, which is an important preliminar­y step,” he said.

An AFP report said that the DPRK special representa­tive for the US, Kim Hyok-chol, arrived in Beijing on Tuesday, apparently en route to Vietnam to meet his Washington counterpar­t ahead of the US-DPRK summit.

Kim Hyok-chol and his US counterpar­t Stephen Biegun were engaged in three days of talks in Pyongyang earlier this month, exploring each side’s positions on denucleari­zation ahead of the much anticipate­d meeting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China