Iran Daily

Moon says ‘too early’ for Pyongyang summit

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South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in on Saturday said it was too early to think about a summit with North Korea despite the Olympic-driven rapprochem­ent with its neighbor.

Moon last week received an invitation from the North’s leader Kim Jong-un for a summit in Pyongyang. The invitation was extended by his younger sister Kim Yo Jong, who visited as part of a high-level delegation to attend the Winter Games in the South, AFP wrote.

“There are high hopes for a Northsouth summit but I think it is a bit rushed,” Moon told reporters in Pyeongchan­g during a visit to the main press center.

“We have a Korean saying (on acting prematurel­y), which is ‘looking for hot water beside the well’,” he added.

The North is subject to multiple sets of UN Security Council sanctions over its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

But the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g have seen Moon and Kim’s younger sister cheering a unified Korean women’s ice hockey team, enjoying a concert and dining together.

However Moon said the so-called “Peace Olympics” have highlighte­d the need for engagement between Washington and Pyongyang.

“The general consensus on the need for dialogue between the US and North Korea is gradually increasing,” he said.

“We are waiting for the current interkorea­n talks to lead to dialogue between the US and North Korea, and to denucleari­zation.”

Washington insists that Pyongyang must take concrete steps toward denucleari­zation before any talks can begin, while Moon has long argued for closer involvemen­t to bring it to the negotiatin­g table. Pyongyang has repeatedly defended its weapons program as being defensive in nature and a deterrent against possible US threats.

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