Business Standard

Koreas discuss peace deal on eve of summit

- JOSH SMITH & JU-MIN PARK

South Korea said on Wednesday it is considerin­g how to change a decades-old armistice with North Korea into a peace agreement, as US officials confirmed an unpreceden­ted top-level meeting with the North Korean leader.

US Secretary of State nominee and CIA Director Mike Pompeo became the most senior US official known to have met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un when he visited Pyongyang at the end of March to discuss a planned summit with US President Donald Trump.

Pompeo's visit provided the strongest sign yet about Trump's willingnes­s to become the first serving US president ever to meet a North Korean leader.

At the same time, old rivals North Korea and South Korea are preparing for their own summit, between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, on April 27, with a bid to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War a major factor in talks.

"As one of the plans, we are looking at a possibilit­y of shifting the Korean peninsula's armistice to a peace regime," a high-ranking South Korean presidenti­al official told reporters when asked about the North-South summit.

"But that's not a matter than can be resolved between the two Koreas alone. It requires close consultati­ons with other concerned nations, as well as North Korea," the official said.

South Korea and a USled UN force are technicall­y still at war with North Korea after the Korean War ended with a truce, not a peace treaty. The US-led United Nations Command, Chinese forces and North Korea signed the 1953 armistice, to which South Korea is not a party.

"I do not know if any joint statement to be reached at the interKorea­n summit would include wording about ending the war, but we certainly hope to be able to include an agreement to end hostile acts between the South and North," the official said.

Such discussion­s between the two Koreas, and between North Korea and the United States, would have been unthinkabl­e at the end of last year, after months of escalating tension, and fear of war, over the North's nuclear and missile programmes.

But then Kim declared in a New Year's speech his country was "a peace-loving and responsibl­e nuclear power" and called for lower military tension and improved ties with the South. He also said he was considerin­g sending a delegation to the Winter Olympics in South Korea in February, a visit that began a succession of steps to improve ties. Pompeo's visit to the North was arranged by South Korean intelligen­ce chief Suh Hoon with his North Korean counterpar­t, Kim Yong Chol, and was intended to assess whether Kim was prepared to hold serious talks, a US official said.

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 ??  ?? The two Koreas are preparing for their own summit, between Kim ( top) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, on April 27, with a bid to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War
The two Koreas are preparing for their own summit, between Kim ( top) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, on April 27, with a bid to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War

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