Los Angeles Times

North, South Korea set date to meet

Negotiator­s agree leaders of the two nations will meet in the DMZ on April 27, but questions remain.

- By Matt Stiles Stiles is a special correspond­ent.

The April 27 summit in the demilitari­zed zone could foreshadow talks between the North’s Kim Jong Un and President Trump.

SEOUL — Negotiator­s from North and South Korea set a date — April 27 — and a location in the demilitari­zed zone along their border for a summit between their two leaders, which could foreshadow a meeting between the North’s Kim Jong Un and President Trump.

The summit between Kim and the South’s president, Moon Jae-in, would be only the third top-level summit between the nations since an armistice ended hostilitie­s in the Korean War in 1953 — and the first held on South Korean soil. The meeting location is the Peace House, a building just over the border on the south in the diplomatic outpost of Panmunjom, presenting the prospect of historic images showing Kim crossing the line.

But it remains unclear precisely how the negotiator­s, meeting Thursday, set the summit framework for any top-level discussion of the North’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs, seen as a key issue in any deal for long-term peace on the Korean peninsula.

The negotiatio­ns over the date and location of the summit opened with a recent history lesson.

Cho Myoung-gyon, the South’s chief negotiator, reminded his counterpar­ts from the North about talks in January over cooperatio­n between the two Koreas at the Winter Olympics — dialogue that sparked the recent torrent of diplomatic activity that holds the promise of resolving decades of tension on the peninsula.

“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step,” Cho, the South’s unificatio­n minister, recalled telling the group then and now. Those talks led to the last-minute participat­ion of North Korean athletes in the Olympics, including as part of a unified Korean women’s hockey team.

Thursday’s deal represente­d another step, among many, in the recent thaw between the two countries. But plenty remain.

Experts watching the developmen­ts are mindful of how past agreements or potential diplomatic breakthrou­ghs fell short.

Two key agreements in recent decades between Washington and Pyongyang over nuclear developmen­t eventually collapsed, and that work continued despite top-level talks between the North and South in 2000 and 2007 under previous leaders.

Kim Byoung-joo, who teaches foreign studies at Hankuk University in Seoul, said the United States and South Korea would seek to avoid the failings of previous agreements.

“This is a first step, but it’s not the same first step of the past, since it’s based on past experience­s and lessons,” he said in reference to Cho’s opening remarks. “It’s a different kind of first step.”

The parties, who met on the North Korean side of the diplomatic complex to discuss the summit, plan to convene again early next month to discuss protocol, security and media coverage of the event, according to a joint statement.

South Korean officials said after the meeting that the summit would in principle focus on the North’s nuclear program, which sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on last year over numerous ballistic missile tests and the undergroun­d detonation of a hydrogen bomb.

The North has boasted that it is now capable of striking the U.S. mainland with a nuclear-armed missile.

The parties also agreed that a peace agreement between North and South, which are still technicall­y at war, remained a goal.

“North and South agreed on the historical significan­ce of the summit in denucleari­zation and settlement of peace on the Korean peninsula, and the improvemen­t of inter-Korean relationsh­ip,” Cho said after the negotiatio­ns.

Ri Son Gwon, Cho’s counterpar­t on inter-Korean issues from the North, said “a number of workinglev­el issues” remain before the summit next month.

“But if we acknowledg­e the historical significan­ce and importance of the upcoming summit and make sincere efforts, we will be able to solve all problems promptly and smoothly,” said Ri, who helped negotiate the Olympics deal and traveled to the South during the Games.

Heather Nauert, the spokeswoma­n for the U.S. State Department, welcomed the announceme­nt of the meeting. The summit “moves us closer to the point where the United States can sit down with North Korea and have a meeting.

“We’re realistic about that overall. The State Department is planning for that meeting. We’re going ahead in full faith and good faith.”

She said the Trump administra­tion believes “overall that the pressure campaign is working .... We’re proud of that pressure campaign, and so many countries joining the United States in recognizin­g [these] destabiliz­ing elements within North Korea and the North Korean regime, in terms of its ballistic missile and nuclear testing.”

As one result of the North Korea talks, Trump said he may put a hold on a new trade deal with South Korea that would lift U.S. steel tariffs in exchange for greater access to the South Korean auto market.

“I may hold it up until after a deal is made with North Korea,” Trump said during a speech in Ohio that was ostensibly about roads and bridges. “Because it’s a very strong card and I want to make sure everyone is treated fairly and we’re moving along very nicely with North Korea.”

The remarks surprised and confused many, because they appeared to draw a link between the trade deal with South Korea and the joint effort by the U.S. and South Korea to enter into talks with North Korea.

Trump agreed in early March to meet Kim, the totalitari­an state’s third-generation leader, in May. The details for those potential talks remain unclear.

The agreement Thursday on the North-South summit details was an incrementa­l step in a rapid diplomatic process that began with the election of Moon, who came to power in May promising a more dialogue focused plan in dealing with the North after a decade of hard-line policies by previous presidents.

Last summer, Moon first floated the idea of a combined Korean hockey team at the Winter Olympics, held in February in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

It wasn’t until Kim’s conciliato­ry speech on New Year’s Day that the idea gained traction.

 ?? Wally Santana Associated Press ?? THE LEADERS of North and South Korea are to meet at the Peace House in the demilitari­zed zone. Above, a meeting room in the DMZ.
Wally Santana Associated Press THE LEADERS of North and South Korea are to meet at the Peace House in the demilitari­zed zone. Above, a meeting room in the DMZ.

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