El Dorado News-Times

Official resigns as tensions rise between Koreas

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Friday accepted the resignatio­n of his point man on North Korea, who had asked to quit after the North destroyed a liaison office while ramping up pressure against Seoul amid stalled nuclear negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion.

Kim Yeon-chul was appointed unificatio­n minister in April last year as talks between the U.S. and Pyongyang began falling apart, and leaves the job without having a single meeting with the North Koreans. He said he wanted to resign to take responsibi­lity for tensions between the rivals.

The North in recent months has virtually cut off all cooperatio­n with the South while expressing frustratio­n over Seoul’s unwillingn­ess to break away from ally Washington and restart inter-Korean economic projects held back by U.S.-led sanctions over its nuclear weapons program.

Kim offered to resign after North Korea in a made-for-TV demonstrat­ion Tuesday used explosives to destroy the building in its border town of Kaesong. The North has also declared it will cut off all government and military communicat­ion channels and abandon a key military agreement reached in 2018 to reduce convention­al threats, which experts say elevates risks of skirmishes in land and sea border areas.

“The (North-South) relations have entered a crisis phase,” Kim said during a farewell speech at the ministry. “I hope that my departure can provide an opportunit­y to halt (the erosion in bilateral relations).”

It isn’t immediatel­y clear who Moon is considerin­g as Kim’s replacemen­t. There are calls for Moon to overhaul his foreign policy and national security personnel amid deteriorat­ing relations with the North and Seoul’s fading role as a mediator in the talks between Washington and Pyongyang, The negotiatio­ns have faltered over disagreeme­nts in exchanging sanctions relief and disarmamen­t steps.

Moon’s government was credited for coordinati­ng a diplomatic push to defuse the nuclear standoff with North Korea, with his envoys shuttling between Pyongyang and Washington to help set up the first meeting between the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump in in Singapore in June 2018.

But there’s criticism that South Korean officials had been too optimistic about the signs they were seeing from Pyongyang. They ran into credibilit­y problems once it became clear Kim had no intent to voluntaril­y deal away the nukes he likely sees as his strongest guarantee of survival.

While taking provocativ­e steps toward the South this month, the North has also unleashed vitriol against North Korean refugees and activists who for years have flown anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border that denounced Kim’s nuclear ambitions and human rights record.

The North, which is sensitive to any criticism toward its leadership, has mobilized massive demonstrat­ions in past weeks condemning the refugees whom its state media describe as “human scum.” Its military has also announced plans to support North Korean civilians flying anti-South Korean propaganda leaflets in areas near the land and sea border. Experts say that could potentiall­y create security problems for the South.

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