Marlborough Express

Surprise Korea meeting a sign of urgency

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met on Saturday for the second time in a month, exchanging a huge bear hug and broad smiles in a surprise summit at a border village to discuss Kim’s potential meeting with President Donald Trump and ways to follow through on the peace initiative­s of the rivals’ earlier summit.

Following a whirlwind 24 hours that saw Trump cancel the highly anticipate­d June 12 meeting with Kim before saying it’s potentiall­y back on, the Korean leaders took matters into their own hands.

Their quickly arranged meeting appears to highlight a sense of urgency on both sides of the world’s most heavily armed border: Moon wants to secure a summit that he sees as the best way to ease animosity that had some fearing a war last year; Kim may see the sit-down with Trump as necessary to easing pressure from crushing sanctions and to winning security assurances in a region surrounded by enemies.

Kim, in a telling line from a dispatch issued by the North’s state-run news service yesterday, ‘‘expressed his fixed will on the historic (North Korea)-us summit talks.’’ The two Korean leaders agreed to ‘‘positively co-operate with each other as ever to improve (North Korea)-us relations and establish (a) mechanism for permanent and durable peace.’’

They agreed to have their top officials meet again June 1 and to set up separate talks between their top generals.

The meeting came hours after South Korea expressed relief over revived talks for a summit between Trump and Kim.

It remains unclear whether Kim will ever agree to fully abandon his nuclear arsenal in return, despite Moon’s insistence that Kim can be persuaded to abandon his nuclear facilities, materials and bombs in a verifiable and irreversib­le way in exchange for credible security and economic guarantees.

Moon, who brokered the summit between Washington and Pyongyang, likely used Saturday’s meeting to confirm Kim’s willingnes­s to enter nuclear negotiatio­ns with Trump and clarify what steps Kim has in mind in the process of denucleari­sation, said Hong Min, a senior analyst at Seoul’s Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n.

‘‘While Washington and Pyongyang have expressed their hopes for a summit through published statements, Moon has to step up as the mediator because the surest way to set the meeting in stone would be an official confirmati­on of intent between heads of states,’’ Hong said. –AP

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