Boston Herald

S. Korea’s Olympic goal: Juggling Kim with Trump

-

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean officials will face a challenge as tough as any Olympic feat this week: drawing the North Koreans back to talks without underminin­g the U.S.’s hard line against Kim Jong Un.

The neighborin­g nations are scheduled to hold their first highlevel meeting in more than two years tomorrow at a border village. The talks — ostensibly focused on North Korea joining next month’s Winter Olympics in nearby Pyeongchan­g

— are the best chance to resurrect negotiatio­ns on Kim’s nuclear weapons program since President Trump took office.

They also represent a moment of risk for an alliance that has endured since the Korean War in the 1950s. While President Moon Jaein has long favored engagement with North Korea, he doesn’t want to endanger U.S.-led efforts to isolate Kim until the North Korean leader agrees to abandon his nuclear weapons program.

Those competing interests restrain what Moon’s negotiatin­g team can offer North Korea beyond cooperatio­n in the Olympics. Some possible South Korean enticement­s, such as reopening a jointly run industrial park and resuming tourism to North Korea, could undercut United Nations sanctions that were tightened just a few weeks ago.

Moon’s government doesn’t know what North Korea wants from the talks, according to three South Korean government officials. In initial conversati­ons, North Korean officials haven’t indicated their goals besides participat­ing in the Games, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Kim’s motivation for suddenly proposing the Olympic detente in a New Year’s address, a departure from his usually dismissive approach toward South Korea, has been seen as an attempt to exploit Moon’s desire for reconcilia­tion and Trump’s push to eliminate a threat to the U.S. homeland. Sanctions against Kim have targeted oil imports and much of the country’s export revenue.

A commentary published yesterday by the staterun Korean Central News Agency in Pyongyang described improved ties with Seoul as a “crucial matter” and warned that “depending on foreign powers” could complicate talks.

Trump and other U.S. officials have so far expressed support for the dialogue while playing down the prospect of a bigger breakthrou­gh. Kim has vowed to never surrender his nuclear arsenal, which makes any U.S.-backed regime-change effort dangerous.

 ??  ?? KIM JONG UN
KIM JONG UN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States