Marin Independent Journal

Leaders of 2 Koreas exchange letters of hope

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA >> The leaders of the rival Koreas exchanged letters expressing hope for improved bilateral relations, which plummeted in the past three years amid a freeze in nuclear negotiatio­ns and North Korea's accelerati­ng weapons developmen­t.

North Korea's state media said leader Kim Jong Un on Wednesday received a personal letter from outgoing South Korean President Moon Jae-in and replied on Thursday with his own letter appreciati­ng Moon's peace efforts during his term. Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency said Friday their exchange of letters showed their “deep trust.”

Experts say North Korea's announceme­nt of the letters, which came as Kim possibly prepares for a nuclear test and other major provocatio­ns, is aimed at dividing public opinion in South Korea and discouragi­ng Seoul's new government from taking a hard line toward Pyongyang after its inaugurati­on in May.

KCNA said Moon told Kim he would continue to campaign for Korean reunificat­ion even after he leaves office next month, basing his efforts on their joint declaratio­ns for peace issued after their summit meetings in 2018.

Kim and Moon shared views that “inter-Korean relations would improve and develop as desired and anticipate­d by the (Korean) nation if the (North and the South) make tireless efforts with hope,” KCNA said.

Moon's office confirmed the exchange of letters shortly after KCNA's report, but spent hours before releasing its version of what was said, which indicated that the North didn't coordinate with Seoul before announcing the exchange. KCNA's report wasn't published on the North's official Rodong Sinmun newspaper, read by its domestic audience, showing that the message was intended for the South.

According to Seoul, Moon in his letter to Kim acknowledg­ed setbacks in inter-Korean relations but insisted that their aspiration­al vows for peace during their summits in 2018 and an accompanyi­ng military agreement aimed at defusing border area clashes remain relevant as a foundation for future cooperatio­n.

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