Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korea expects Kim openness on nukes

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SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong Un, North Korea’s leader, plans to formally announce his willingnes­s to denucleari­ze his country when he meets with President Moon Jae-in of South Korea next week, an official from the South said Tuesday.

The statement is expected to be part of a joint declaratio­n that the two leaders will adopt when they meet April 27, said Moon’s chief of staff,

Im Jong-seok. Negotiator­s from both Koreas have agreed on a rough framework for the joint declaratio­n, he said.

They are still discussing other aspects of the joint statement, such as whether the two Koreas would commit to holding summit meetings on a regular basis, Im said. South Korea is also trying to convince North Korea that Moon and Kim should hold a joint news conference at the end of their meeting in Panmunjom, the so-called truce village on the

inter-Korean border.

If necessary, Moon’s national security adviser, Chung Eui-yong, and his spy chief, Suh Hoon, will visit the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, again to resolve any significan­t issues before the summit, Im said.

When Chung and Suh visited Kim last month as Moon’s special envoys, Kim told them that he would be willing to discuss giving up nuclear weapons if his government no longer felt threatened militarily and its security was guaranteed.

“Although the special envoys have already confirmed a willingnes­s to denucleari­ze, it will make a difference if the two heads of state will meet and more clearly confirm it and make it a formal statement,” Im told reporters Tuesday.

More talks are needed to determine how specific the declaratio­n would be about denucleari­zation, said Im, who is in charge of South Korean officials preparing for the summit. But he said the joint statement would be broad and fairly “abstract,” because any substantia­l deal on the North’s nuclear weapons must be struck between Kim and President Donald Trump.

Trump has said he plans to meet with Kim in May or early June to try to persuade Kim to dismantle his nuclear weapons program. Moon, whose envoys took Trump the message that Kim wanted to talk, has tried to be a mediator between the American and North Korean leaders, viewing his own meeting with Kim as laying the groundwork for the more important one to follow.

North Korean and U.S. officials have also been holding talks in preparatio­n for their leaders’ meeting, during which U.S. officials have said the North reaffirmed a willingnes­s to discuss denucleari­zation. But it is still unclear what Kim would seek in return for abandoning nuclear arms, and whether those demands would be acceptable to Washington.

When Kim met with President Xi Jinping of China late last month, he called for a “phased” and “synchroniz­ed” implementa­tion of any denucleari­zation deal. Under such an approach, which North Korea has sought in past talks about its nuclear programs, the North would dismantle its program in stages, with each met by an incentive such as an easing of internatio­nal sanctions.

Some American hard-liners reject such an approach, saying the North has no real intention of giving up nuclear weapons and is only seeking relief from sanctions. John Bolton made that argument before Trump chose him last month as national security adviser.

According to South Korean officials and analysts, Moon hopes for a “comprehens­ive deal” in which Kim commits to dismantlin­g his nuclear arsenal and Trump reciprocat­es with security guarantees for the North, including normalized ties and a peace treaty with Washington.

“When our special envoys visited Pyongyang, the mood was not bad, and we understand that the North Koreans and the Americans are both engaged in sincere discussion­s, so we are optimistic about the inter-Korean summit,” Im said. “But we could face obstacles any time.”

The Munhwa Ilbo newspaper reported, citing an unidentifi­ed South Korean official, that the two Koreas are also discussing plans to announce an official end to the military conflict between the two countries that are still technicall­y at war.

At next week’s summit between Moon and Kim, the two neighbors may release a joint statement saying they will seek to ease military tension and to end confrontat­ion, according to the report.

No peace treaty has been signed to replace the 1953 armistice that ended the Korean War, and the U.S. and North Korea have been at loggerhead­s since formal hostilitie­s ended.

The peninsula remains bisected in a perpetual stalemate, with the U.S.-backed South Korean military lined up against more than a million North Korean troops. While tensions have occasional­ly flared, the two sides have so far staved off another devastatin­g conflict.

“Ending the state of conflict is the core of the whole thing. Peace is as complicate­d as denucleari­zation,” said John Delury, an associate professor of Chinese studies at Yonsei University in Seoul. “There also has to be a process of actually delivering the peace.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Choe Sang-Hun of The New York Times; and by Jiyeun Lee of Bloomberg News.

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