Los Angeles Times

Two Koreas agree to hold further talks

Meeting this week will refine plan for historic summit between the two nations’ leaders.

- By Matt Stiles Stiles is a special correspond­ent.

SEOUL — Momentum continues to build toward a historic security summit between the leaders of North and South Korea, talks that might also pave the way for Kim Jong Un to meet President Trump in May.

Negotiator­s for the North and South agreed Saturday on a plan to meet again Thursday inside the demilitari­zed zone — a buffer area separating the two countries — to continue refining the agenda for next month’s historic, top-level summit between their respective leaders.

The announceme­nt from the South Korean Unificatio­n Ministry said the talks would be held at Tongilgak, a building on the North Korean side of Panmunjom, an iconic diplomatic outpost along the highly fortified border between the two countries.

The outpost is where negotiator­s from the two countries discussed their joint participat­ion in the recent Winter Olympics — a diplomatic breakthrou­gh that has revived hopes that years of inter-Korean tension might be easing.

The Olympics diplomacy also led to the prospect that Trump might attend a summit in May with Kim, the North Korean leader who made the offer in early March to a delegation from the South that was visiting the North’s capital, Pyongyang. The pair could also agree to meet at Panmunjom, because of its proximity to the North and its security.

The likelihood of any Kim-Trump summit remains unknown, as does the agenda, and the North hasn’t publicly acknowledg­ed its invitation. But some preliminar­y talks appear to have occurred in recent days as North Korean diplomats traveled to Finland and Sweden. The latter is an occasional intermedia­ry for matters involving the North and the United States.

Both potential summits hold out hope that North Korea might be willing to discuss its advancing nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs, which have prompted internatio­nal condemnati­on and further isolated the totalitari­an nation through economic sanctions.

President Moon Jae-in of South Korea last week said that Pyongyang and Seoul must seek better relations on the peninsula, but that Kim’s nation must also try to find agreement with its longtime adversary, the United States, which has 28,000 troops based around the South.

“Settlement of peace on the Korean peninsula cannot be achieved solely by agreements between the two Koreas,” he said. “It needs to be guaranteed by the U.S. And that requires a normalized relationsh­ip between the U.S. and North Korea, which must further advance to economic cooperatio­n between the two countries.”

The North, which testlaunch­ed three interconti­nental ballistic missiles last year and detonated a hydrogen bomb undergroun­d, claims it can attack the U.S. mainland with a nuclear strike. Kim and Trump traded insults and threats during 2017, making prospects for a face-to-face meeting all the more surprising.

This week’s meeting between the North and South, described as “highlevel” talks between top ministeria­l aides, is to hammer out the details for next month’s summit between Kim and Moon.

The respective ministers handling inter-Korean affairs — the same men who negotiated the Olympics deal — were expected to lead the talks.

If a Moon-Kim summit occurs, probably in late April, it would be only the third face-to-face meeting between the leaders of the two countries — and the first since 2007. They remain divided under a 1953 armistice that ended Korean War hostilitie­s.

In a statement Saturday, the South’s Unificatio­n Ministry said it “will put its utmost efforts in preparing for the inter-Korean summit through the high-level talks.”

 ?? Ahn Young-joon Associated Press ?? MARCHERS rally for peace on the Korean peninsula Saturday in Seoul. Talks between the North and South could precede a Trump meeting with Kim Jong Un.
Ahn Young-joon Associated Press MARCHERS rally for peace on the Korean peninsula Saturday in Seoul. Talks between the North and South could precede a Trump meeting with Kim Jong Un.

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