Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korean heads for talks with Trump

N. Korea, U.S. missile defense system and trade expected D.C. topics for Moon

- MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON — South Korea’s new leader, on a fourday visit to Washington, was aiming to reconcile difference­s with President Donald Trump after advocating a softer approach to North Korea and delaying U.S. plans for the full deployment of a missile defense system in his country.

President Moon Jae-in was elected last month after his conservati­ve predecesso­r — who, like Trump, took a hard line toward the North — was impeached in a bribery scandal.

Moon, set to arrive on Wednesday afternoon, has long favored engaging North Korea despite its rapidly advancing nuclear capability. Neverthele­ss, the North’s rapid tempo of missile tests has continued on Moon’s watch.

The talks between Moon and Trump come amid intense wrangling over North Korea.

China is pushing the United States to start negotiatio­ns with the North. That prospect appears to be receding as Trump grows frustrated over China’s level of economic pressure on the North, its wayward ally.

North Korea shows no sign of wanting to restart talks on abandoning its nuclear weapons program, which may be only years away from the capability to strike the U.S. mainland.

Moon was hoping to forge a bond with Trump that most foreign leaders are emphasizin­g these days as they beat a path to the White House. Trump and Moon were to have dinner tonight and hold formal talks Friday.

On the face of it, there’s little in common between the brash American tycoon turned populist president and a former human-rights lawyer who received an elite education but opted for grass-roots activism.

Moon’s past close associatio­n with Roh Moo-hyun, the South Korea’s leader who pursued a “sunshine” policy of diplomatic and economic outreach toward the North a decade ago, raises the possibilit­ies of fresh U.S.-South Korean strains.

To symbolize his commitment to the U.S. alliance, Moon planned for first stop on Wednesday to honor Marines who helped evacuate to safety tens of thousands of Korean civilians after one of the fiercest battles of the Korean War. Moon’s own parents were among them.

He was scheduled to lay a wreath at a new memorial at a Marines base in Quantico, Va., for the 1950 Battle of Chosin Reservoir.

The memorial commemorat­es a brave rearguard action by Marines during that bitter winter as Chinese troops advanced. The mass evacuation occurred as U.S.-allied forces retreated from North Korea. Moon was born in South Korea, three years later.

In interviews before his visit, Moon has tried to minimize potential difference­s with Trump, describing his approach to the North as consistent with the U.S. administra­tion strategy of “maximum pressure and engagement.”

The White House is also playing down difference­s.

Moon said North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is “unreasonab­le” and “very dangerous” and that pressure was necessary. But Moon said sanctions alone would not solve the problem, and dialogue was needed “under the right conditions.”

A similar message was conveyed by six prominent former U.S. officials on Wednesday, including former Defense Secretary William Perry and former Secretary of State George Shultz. They wrote to Trump, urging him to establish communicat­ion with North Korea “to avoid a nuclear catastroph­e.”

Last weekend, Moon suggested having a unified Korean team for the Winter Olympics due to be held in South Korea next year. That may undermine the U.S. drive to isolate the North, but a senior White House official said Trump was interested in hearing Moon’s ideas for potential engagement. The official insisted on anonymity in order to brief reporters on planning for the visit.

Missile defense is another area of apparent U.S.-South Korean disconnect.

Earlier this month, Moon surprised U.S. officials by delaying the full deployment of a U.S. system intended to protect South Korea and the 28,000 U.S. forces based there against North Korean missiles. Seoul’s previous government supported the deployment despite local opposition and Chinese objections.

Moon’s government has ordered an environmen­tal review before allowing additional launchers for the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system. South Korean officials say that does not mean they are placating China or reversing the decision, which risks angering Washington.

Moon’s visit will not be all about North Korea. He planned to address economic ties that have expanded under a 2012 bilateral free trade agreement. A meeting with U.S. business leaders and addresses the U.S. Chamber of Commerce was also on the agenda.

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