Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korean pushes for meeting with North after U.S. cancels

- CHOE SANG-HUN THE NEW YORK TIMES Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Paul Sonne of The Washington Post.

SEOUL, South Korea — President Moon Jae-in of South Korea sees a more urgent need to travel to North Korea next month and meet with its leader, Kim Jong Un, now that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s planned trip there this week has been canceled, Moon’s office said Wednesday.

North and South Korea had earlier agreed to hold a third summit in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, next month. But Moon had hoped that Pompeo would first break a logjam in talks over denucleari­zing the North, making it easier for him to push his agenda of increasing economic and other inter-Korean ties when he sat down with Kim.

Moon’s plan was cast into doubt after President Donald Trump on Friday abruptly canceled Pompeo’s trip.

But on Wednesday, Moon’s office said he was intent on working as a mediator between Kim and Trump, just as he helped broker their first meeting in June.

“Now that North Korea and the United States remain deadlocked, a new South-North Korean summit meeting, if anything, will play an even bigger role in helping resolve problems and overcoming obstacles,” Kim Eui-kyeom, a spokesman for Moon, said Wednesday.

In Washington on Tuesday, Heather Nauert, a State Department spokesman, did not voice an objection to another meeting of the Korean leaders but reminded Moon of his repeated promise to keep any progress in inter-Korean relations tied to progress in denucleari­zing the North.

U.S. analysts have raised concerns that Moon’s eagerness to improve inter-Korean ties may undermine Washington’s efforts to apply “maximum pressure” on the North to denucleari­ze, although Moon’s aides called such fears unwarrante­d.

Moon’s office reaffirmed that he was keen to meet with Kim, doing so a day after Defense Secretary James Mattis said that the Pentagon had “no plans at this time to suspend” joint military exercises with South Korea. Coming only days after the cancellati­on of Pompeo’s trip, Mattis’ comments were widely taken as indicating that the Pentagon may revive the exercises.

In tweets on Wednesday night, Trump contradict­ed Mattis, saying “there is no reason at this time to be spending large amounts of money on joint U.S.South Korea war games.”

Trump, referring to himself, added: “Besides, the President can instantly start the joint exercises again with South Korea and Japan, if he so chooses. If he does, they will be far bigger than ever before.”

After Trump met with Kim in Singapore, the United States and South Korean militaries nodded to diplomatic progress by suspending several of their major annual joint military exercises. North Korea has traditiona­lly protested these drills, calling them rehearsals for invasion.

Both Seoul and Washington have said they have not decided about future exercises, including large-scale drills scheduled for next spring, indicating that it will depend on whether North Korea moves toward denucleari­zing.

On Wednesday, the South Korean government played down the significan­ce of Mattis’ comments, saying they reiterated an existing American-South Korean joint policy. It said there had been no discussion between the allies on whether and when to resume major military exercises.

In his meeting with Trump in Singapore, Kim offered a vague commitment to “work toward the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula” in return for Trump’s commitment to build “new” bilateral ties with North Korea and a “lasting and stable peace regime” on the peninsula.

But bilateral talks have since stalled over difference­s over how to carry out the deal, leading to the cancellati­on of Pompeo’s North Korea trip.

The latest hitch in the talks centers on the North’s demand that the United States join the two Koreas in jointly declaring an end to the 1950-53 Korean War, Suh Hoon, director of Seoul’s National Intelligen­ce Service, told a private parliament­ary hearing Tuesday, according to lawmakers who briefed journalist­s on it. North Korea is seeking an end-of-thewar declaratio­n as a prelude to negotiatin­g a formal peace treaty to replace the armistice that halted the war.

But Washington insists that before such a declaratio­n is made, North Korea must make a declaratio­n to dismantle its nuclear weapons, Suh was quoted as saying.

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