Dayton Daily News

Seoul: North Korea willing to talk to U.S.

- By Anna Fifield

North Korea is “willing to have talks” with the United States, South Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House said Sunday, as the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics closed in a burst of fireworks and diplomacy.

President Moon Jae-in achieved his goal of using the Olympics as “peace games” to encourage both North Korea and the United States to ease off their threats, at least temporaril­y.

During an hour-long meeting in Pyeongchan­g on Sunday night, North Korea’s chief representa­tives at the closing ceremonies told Moon that Pyongyang was open to dialogue with Washington .

“The North agrees that inter-Korean relations and North Korea-U. S. relations should improve together,” the presidenti­al Blue House said in a statement after the talks.

The statement did not make any mention of North Korea’s nuclear program or whether the dialogue would be about denucleari­zation. Pyongyang has previously insisted that its nuclear weapons are not up for discussion.

The White House on Sunday took a wait-and-see stance. But still, this is the first sign of willingnes­s from North Korea in years, and it comes when the Trump administra­tion has been signaling an openness to talk without preconditi­ons.

Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter and adviser, represente­d the United States at the closing event and sat in the same VIP box as North Korea’s lead delegate, Kim Yong Chol, who is sanctioned by the United States for his involvemen­t in North Korea’s nuclear program. Gen. Vincent Brooks, the commander of U.S. Forces in South Korea, who was in full military uniform, sat just two seats from Kim Yong Chol.

South Korean conservati­ves staged an overnight sit-in at a border to try to prevent the North Korean from entering the country.

He is widely accused of mastermind­ing two deadly attacks in 2010: a torpedo attack on the Cheonan naval corvette, which killed 46 South Korean sailors, and the shelling of an island, which killed four.

But their efforts were stymied: The delegation crossed Sunday morning using a military road, attending the meeting with Moon and then the closing.

Kim Yong Chol and Trump did not appear to interact during the closing.

But speculatio­n about secret talks mounted when Choe Kang Il, deputy director of the U.S. affairs division in North Korea’s foreign ministry, arrived with the North Korean delegation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States