China Daily

US should treasure Korean Peninsula progress

-

THE KOREAN PENINSULA, shrouded in clouds of war not long ago, is now bustling with heartening interactio­ns between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea, as the remarkable inter-Korean detente continues to take root. Xinhua comments:

The United States is called upon to do more to push the troubled peninsula toward lasting peace. Pyongyang and Seoul are obviously making headway in improving ties as their high-level talks have expanded to include officials not only from the diplomatic and military agencies, but also from economic department­s.

In a sign of their deepening ties, workinglev­el officials of the two Koreas made on-site inspection­s of the railways in the DPRK with the aim of modernizin­g them and eventually connecting them across the border as agreed upon in the two sides’ Panmunjom Declaratio­n, issued at the end of the first inter-Korean summit in April.

Such a warm atmosphere has raised hopes that peace on the peninsula may not be a distant dream.

But such hopes are fragile as Washington has been dragging its feet after the historic summit in Singapore between US President Donald Trump and DPRK leader Kim Jong-un.

The DPRK returned the remains of US war dead for which Trump thanked it, and the US president also thanked Kim for dismantlin­g the Sohae Satellite Launch Station. But so far the US has offered only warm words and no correspond­ing actions.

The crux of the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue lies in DPRK-US relations. The lack of conciliato­ry moves by the US is reason for concern as substantiv­e progress can hardly be achieved on the Korean Peninsula unless Pyongyang and Washington are willing to compromise all the way to a final solution.

If Washington continues with its current practice of asking too much and doing too little, the hard-earned positive momentum may vanish before long and all the previous efforts will be squandered.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong