Cape Argus

N Korea’s rocky road relationsh­ip with the US

The summit between the two countries comes after a history of mistrust

- Hyung-Jin Kim

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un are to meet in Singapore today for a summit that will be the first of its kind between leaders of the rival nations. Here are 10 other historic moments in relations between the US and North Korea:

● The two countries fought on opposite sides of a three-year war in the early 1950s that killed millions of people, including 36 000 American soldiers. The war began in June 1950 when North Korean troops poured across the border at the 38th parallel and launched a surprise assault.

A weak South Korean military was initially almost driven off the peninsula before the American-led UN forces pushed the invaders deep into North Korea.

The Chinese military later intervened, pushing the UN forces back. The fighting ended with an armistice in July 1953. That armistice has yet to be replaced with a peace treaty, leaving the peninsula in a technical state of war. The US still stations about 28 500 soldiers in South Korea.

● In January 1968, North Korean navy boats attacked and captured the USS Pueblo off the North’s east coast. One US sailor was killed and 82 others were captured. They were held in North Korea for 11 months, beaten and interrogat­ed before being released after the chief US negotiator signed a statement acknowledg­ing the ship illegally entered the North’s territoria­l waters. North Korea puts the Pueblo on display in Pyongyang, making it the only US Navy ship held captive by a foreign country.

● In the summer of 1976, two American soldiers were hacked to death by axewieldin­g North Korean soldiers during a fight over US efforts to trim a poplar tree at Demilitari­zed Zone that bisects the Koreas.

An enraged US responded by flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers toward the DMZ to intimidate North Korea. Rising animositie­s eased after then-North Korean leader Kim Il-sung, the late grandfathe­r of Kim Jong-un, expressed regret over the killing. It remains the most notorious bloodshed at the DMZ, which is strewn with mines and barbed-wire fences.

● In June 1994, former US president Jimmy Carter travelled to North Korea via the DMZ and had two rounds of lengthy talks with Kim Il-sung in an effort to resolve an early round of nuclear confrontat­ion. After returning to the South, Carter conveyed Kim Il-sung’s offer for an inter-Korean summit and South Korean president Kim Young-sam accepted.

What could have been the Koreas’ first summit fizzled, however, after Kim Il-sung died of a heart attack in July 1994. His son, Kim Jong-il, inherited power, and he held the Koreas’ first summit in 2000 with then South Korean president Kim Dae-jung.

● In October 1994, the US signed a landmark nuclear disarmamen­t deal with North Korea, ending months of war fears triggered by the North’s threat to withdraw from the nuclear Non-proliferat­ion Treaty and convert its stockpile of nuclear fuel into bombs. Under the pact called the “Agreed Framework”, the North froze its atomic activities and agreed to eventually dismantle its nuclear facilities in exchange for the constructi­on of two light-water nuclear reactors for electricit­y generation and supply of oil. The deal collapsed in 2002, when US officials accused North Korea of covertly running a nuclear programme using enriched uranium.

● In October 2000, Kim Jong-il’s vice-marshal, Jo Myong Rok, flew to the US, becoming the most senior North Korean official to visit its wartime foe since the end of the Korean War. Jo met then-president Bill Clinton and delivered Kim’s personal letter. His trip came as the two countries were seeking to improve ties A few weeks after Jo’s trip, US secretary of state Madeleine Albright made a reciprocal visit to Pyongyang to try to arrange a North Korea visit by Clinton. She met Kim Jong-il and they watched the Arirang mass game spectacle that included a giant mosaic displaying a rocket flying into the sky.

● The reconcilia­tory mood between the two countries shifted dramatical­ly after president George W Bush took office in January 2001 with a tough policy on the North. Clinton eventually went to North Korea as a former president in 2009 to secure the freedom of two detained American journalist­s held there.

● The US was brought back to the negotiatin­g table with North Korea in 2003, this time under the framework of six-party talks that also involved South Korea, China, Russia and Japan. During the on-and-off talks that continued until 2008, North Korea halted nuclear activities again in return for security, economic and energy benefits. But the talks broke down amid wrangling over how to verify its disarmamen­t steps. North Korea officially pulled out of the talks in 2009 to protest internatio­nal condemnati­on over a prohibited long-range rocket launch.

● After taking power after his father Kim Jong-il’s death in late 2011, Kim Jongun started carrying out a large number of weapons tests as part of his stated objective of building nuclear-tipped missiles capable of reaching the US mainland. Last year the world saw fears of war on the Korean Peninsula escalating after North Korea conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test and three interconti­nental ballistic missile test launches. Kim and Trump traded threats to attack one another.

● Kim changed tactics this year, sending a delegation to the Winter Olympics in the South and holding a summit with South Korean President Moon Jae-in. Kim has offered to negotiate away his nuclear programme if provided with a security guarantee from the US. Trump eventually agreed to meet him. Kim’s top lieutenant and former intelligen­ce chief, Kim Yong Chol, travelled to the US with a personal letter to Trump, after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo went to Pyongyang and met the North Korean leader twice. – AP

 ??  ?? STATE OF WAR: Residents from Pyongyang, North Korea, and refugees from other areas crawl over shattered girders of the city’s bridge as they flee south across the Taedong River to escape Chinese Communist troops in the 1950s.
STATE OF WAR: Residents from Pyongyang, North Korea, and refugees from other areas crawl over shattered girders of the city’s bridge as they flee south across the Taedong River to escape Chinese Communist troops in the 1950s.
 ??  ?? DIPLOMATIC: US president Bill Clinton with assistant secretary of state Robert Gallucci in 1994, when the US signed a deal with North Korea.
DIPLOMATIC: US president Bill Clinton with assistant secretary of state Robert Gallucci in 1994, when the US signed a deal with North Korea.
 ?? PICTURES: AP ?? BLOODSHED: In this 1976 photo, North Korean soldiers attack UN Command personnel at the truce village of Panmunjom, South Korea.
PICTURES: AP BLOODSHED: In this 1976 photo, North Korean soldiers attack UN Command personnel at the truce village of Panmunjom, South Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa