Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kim removes negotiatio­n obstacle

- CHOE SANG-HUN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by staff members of The Associated Press.

SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong Un, North Korea’s leader, has removed a key obstacle to negotiatio­ns with Washington by ceasing to demand that American troops be removed from South Korea as a condition for denucleari­zing his country, the South’s president, Moon Jae-in, said Thursday.

The change in stance, if officially confirmed by the North, could affect the United States’ long-term military plans in Northeast Asia and ease Washington’s reluctance to strike a deal with North Korea.

For decades, the reclusive country, an ally of China, has demanded the withdrawal of 28,500 American troops in South Korea, citing their presence as a pretext to justify its developmen­t of nuclear weapons. The demand has always been a nonstarter for South Korean and American negotiator­s.

On Thursday, Moon said North Korea no longer included that demand in the list of things it wanted in return for giving up its nuclear weapons. That has encouraged the United States to proceed with plans to hold its first-ever summit meeting with North Korea, he said.

President Donald Trump sent the CIA director, Mike Pompeo, to Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, at the beginning of April to meet with Kim to assess how serious North Korea was about negotiatin­g away its nuclear weapons.

Trump later said “a good relationsh­ip was formed” with the North Koreans. He plans to meet with Kim in May or early June, although he warned Wednesday that he would scrap those plans if it “is not going to be fruitful.”

But Moon said North Korea was already showing a willingnes­s to make concession­s.

“The North Koreans did not present any conditions that the United States could not accept, such as the withdrawal of American troops in South Korea,” Moon told newspaper publishers in Seoul on Thursday ahead of his planned April 27 summit meeting with Kim.

“They only talk about an end to hostilitie­s against their country and about getting security guarantees,” he said. “It’s safe to say that the plans for dialogue between the North and the United States could proceed because that has been made clear.”

When Moon’s special envoys met with Kim in Pyongyang early last month, Kim said his country would no longer need nuclear weapons if it did not feel “threatened militarily” and was provided with “security guarantees.”

North Korea issued an official government statement as recently as 2016 calling on Washington to announce the withdrawal of U.S. troops if it wanted to denucleari­ze the Korean Peninsula.

A retreat from that demand would not be entirely surprising, according to officials who have dealt with North Korea.

Since the 1990s, North Korean officials have occasional­ly told the Americans and South Koreans that they could live with a U.S. military presence in the South if Washington signed a peace treaty and normalized ties with the North. Kim’s father and predecesso­r, Kim Jong Il, sent Kim Yong-soon, a party secretary, to the United States in 1992 to deliver that message.

When South Korea’s president at the time, Kim Daejung, met with Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang in 2000, the North Korean leader was quoted as saying that keeping U.S. troops in Korea for “stability in Northeast Asia” even after a reunificat­ion was “not a bad idea, provided that the status and the role of U.S. troops be changed.”

“It is desirable that U.S. troops stay as a peacekeepi­ng force in Korea, instead of a hostile force against the North,” Kim Jong Il said, according to the book Peacemaker, by Lim Dong-won, a former South Korean politician who attended the 2000 inter-Korean summit meeting.

At a forum organized this month by the Seoul-based website Newspim, Lim said that although North Korea had regularly demanded the withdrawal of U.S. troops, it was important to differenti­ate its “propaganda policy” from its “real policy.” Lim, a former unificatio­n minister of South Korea, said he believed that the North could accept an American military presence and negotiate away its nuclear weapons if it was offered the right incentives.

But analysts said that even if North Korea accepted a U.S. military presence in the South, it might demand that it be significan­tly reconfigur­ed and downsized.

In its 2016 statement, North Korea also demanded that the United States stop deploying long-range bombers, submarines and other “nuclear-strike capabiliti­es” in and around South Korea if it wanted a nuclear-free peninsula, a condition that analysts said would please China.

On Thursday, Moon dismissed concerns that the United States might end up recognizin­g North Korea as a de facto nuclear power in return for a promise from it to freeze its nuclear and missile programs.

“I don’t think there is any difference between the parties over what they mean by denucleari­zation,” Moon said. “North Korea is expressing a willingnes­s to denucleari­ze completely.”

Even with talks underway for the Trump-Kim summit, a U.S. ambassador said Thursday that the U.S. is maintainin­g a “maximum pressure campaign” to persuade North Korea to denucleari­ze.

Robert Wood, the top U.S. envoy to the U.N.-hosted Conference on Disarmamen­t, said the U.S. believes the ongoing pressure campaign “has had an important impact in the North’s decision to return to the table.”

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