Santa Cruz Sentinel

South Korea’s leader vows final push for talks with North

- By Hyung-Jin Kim

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA South Korea’s president said Monday he’ll keep striving to promote peace with North Korea through dialogue until the end of his term next May, after Pyongyang raised animositie­s with a resumption of provocativ­e weapons tests.

While launching a spate of newly developed weapons in recent weeks, North Korea has also slammed Washington and Seoul over what it calls hostility toward the North. Its actions indicate North Korea wants its rivals to ease economic sanctions against it and accept it as a legitimate nuclear state, experts say.

In his final policy speech at parliament, President Moon Jae-in said he’ll “make efforts to the end to help a new order for peace and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula be establishe­d through dialogue and diplomacy.”

Moon, a champion of greater reconcilia­tion with North Korea, once shuttled between Pyongyang and Washington to help facilitate now-stalled nuclear diplomacy between the two countries. Pyongyang turned a cold shoulder on Moon after its diplomacy with Washington broke down in early 2019 amid bickering over the sanctions.

Moon praised himself for paving the way for a peace process on the Korean Peninsula by holding three summits with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and helping arrange the first-ever North KoreaU.S. summit between Kim and then-President Donald Trump in 2018.

But Moon acknowledg­ed his push for peace through dialogue remains “incomplete.”

Moon’s single five-year term ends next May, and he’s barred by law from seeking reelection. The presidenti­al candidate of Moon’s ruling liberal party has unveiled a similar North Korea policy as

Moon’s. Surveys indicate a neck-and-neck race with a potential conservati­ve candidate, who will likely take a harder line on the North.

Moon’s appeasemen­t policy on North Korea has been divisive, with his supporters call him a peacemakin­g mediator while his opponents accused him of helping North Korea find ways to weaken internatio­nal pressure and perfect its weapons systems.

The North Korean weapons systems tested recently are mostly short- and medium-range weapons that place South Korea and Japan within their striking ranges. Last Tuesday, North Korea fired a ballistic missile from a submarine in its most significan­t weapons test since President Joe Biden took office in January.

Some experts say North Korea may test a longerrang­e missile that could pose a direct threat to the American homeland to increase its pressure on Washington in coming weeks.

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE — POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in delivers a speech at the National Assembly in Seoul, on Monday.
JUNG YEON-JE — POOL PHOTO VIA AP South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in delivers a speech at the National Assembly in Seoul, on Monday.

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