Business Standard

NORTH KOREA GAME FOR OLYMPICS, NOT NUCLEAR TALKS

- DAVID TWEED & KANGA KONG

North Korea’s chief negotiator Ri Son Gwon struck a jovial tone as he sat down on Tuesday morning for his country’s first formal talks with South Korea in more than two years.

He joked about how the subzero temperatur­es reflected frosty ties and asked for the proceeding­s to be broadcast live — a request that South Korea turned down. After a few hours, South Korea announced that North Korea would join the Olympics next month in Pyeongchan­g, a ski town not far from their shared border.

Yet as the day wore on, and South Korea proposed talks on ending North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme, the mood appeared to sour. Ri issued a “strong complaint” that Seoul dared to even raise the possibilit­y of denucleari­sation at such an early stage.

North Korea’s participat­ion in the Winter Games starting February 9 brings potential benefits to the troubled Korean peninsula, which has been divided for more than 70 years. Kim Jong Un gets the opportunit­y to ease the global pressure on his isolated regime, while South Korean President Moon Jae-in can bet on a more peaceful Olympics and claim a victory in his push for dialogue. But the long-term dilemma remains: North Korea sees its nuclear weapons — and the ability to use them against the US — as the only thing protecting against an American invasion. At the same time, US President Donald Trump views Kim’s nuclear arsenal as an intolerabl­e threat, one that must be eradicated by war if necessary. All of North Korea’s “highend strategic weapons” are targeted at the US, Ri said at the conclusion of the talks Tuesday, according to South Korean media. Ahead of the talks, the US and Japan sought reassuranc­es from Moon that he would continue to press Kim over his weapons program.

In his annual New Year’s Day address, Kim blasted the “vicious sanctions” and American efforts to isolate North Korea on the world stage. He also taunted Trump boasting of a credible nuclear deterrent that would prevent the US “from starting an adventurou­s war.”

In pitching talks with South Korea, Kim sought to exacerbate tensions in Seoul’s alliance with the US. He called for Koreans to solve their own problems, a sentiment that was repeated in the joint statement from the talks on Tuesday.

For Moon, it’s a tempting message. Earlier this year, as US officials signalled they would tolerate casualties in Seoul in a preemptive strike against North Korea, the South Korean leader pledged to prevent war at all costs. At the same time, South Korea doesn’t want to see the US cut a deal with Pyongyang that freezes its nuclear program in a way that eliminates a threat to Washington while leaving Seoul exposed, according to Youngshik Bong, a researcher at Yonsei Institute for North Korean Studies in Seoul.

“Then South Korea will be left cold and dry, with North Korea still possessing nuclear weapons and missiles,” Bong said.

For now, the US remains on the sidelines, even as Trump on Saturday suggested he could meet Kim under the right conditions, calling the talks over the Olympics “a big start.” Despite the frictions over nuclear weapons, the two sides also agreed on Tuesday to hold a military dialogue and resolve problems through negotiatio­ns.

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 ??  ?? Head of North Korean delegation Ri Son Gwon (centre) is greeted by South Korean officials at Panmunjom in the Demilitari­sed Zone in Paju, South Korea on Tuesday
Head of North Korean delegation Ri Son Gwon (centre) is greeted by South Korean officials at Panmunjom in the Demilitari­sed Zone in Paju, South Korea on Tuesday

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