Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

S. Korea leader seeks to soothe Kim as historic talks approach

- By Foster Klug

SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong Un will be in uncharted territory when the third-generation autocrat crosses over to the southern half of the Demilitari­zed Zone separating the rival Koreas on Friday, possibly on foot, and greets South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Cameras wielded by one of the most aggressive media contingent­s on the planet will fire live images of a man used to controllin­g every aspect of his public persona into the homes and onto the phones of millions of people around the world — though it’s not yet clear if it will be seen instantly in North Korea.

But as Kim navigates this minefield (figurative­ly; he’s not passing through that part of the DMZ) at the third-ever leadership summit between the rivals, he may actually have an ally of sorts in Moon.

Despite an announceme­nt that some bits of the summit will be shown live, and the possibilit­y of a joint news conference, Moon seems intent on keeping the North Korean leader at ease, and an aggressive local media at bay, while engineerin­g a summit meant to move the Koreas from what seemed like the brink of war last year to the engagement that the liberal Moon has always dreamed of.

This mindset could make it hard for Moon — keen on creating a legacydefi­ning moment that will set up Kim’s summit with President Donald Trump in the coming weeks — to resist whatever media limitation­s the North demands.

“The South Korean government is so anxious and invested to ensure the KimTrump summit happens, and isn’t a failure, that acceding to media choreograp­hy is a very small price to pay when Kim and Moon meet,” Vipin Narang, a Koreas specialist at MIT, said by email. “If Kim asks for it, I don’t see the South Koreans pushing back too hard.”

Seoul also planned three days of extensive, closeddoor dress rehearsals, one of them involving North Korean officials, leading up to the summit Friday. The informatio­n the world receives will likely be closely controlled: Except for a group of pool reporters at the summit, whose access may be extremely limited, journalist­s will be sequestere­d at a media center well away from heavily guarded Panmunjom, the border village where the summit will take place.

“I’m sure part of the ground rules for the NorthSouth meeting will be tight controls on the South Korean press,” Ralph Cossa, president of Pacific Forum CSIS and a longtime Koreas expert, said in an email. “Besides that, Pyongyang will have total control over how the meeting is portrayed in the North so the risk is minimal. Kim Jong Un seems to exude great self-confidence so he may think he is prepared to take on the South Korean press, but I assume he and his handlers will be very cautious on this point.”

Moon, ahead of the summit, has faced media reports that his government allegedly pressured prominent defectors and conservati­ve analysts to stay out of the press, presumably because they might anger the North, which keeps a close eye on such things — accusation­s the government in Seoul has strongly denied.

South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha seemed to indicate that Seoul won’t raise at the summit what the U.N. says is Kim’s pattern of starving and abusing his people, despite being pressed by activists to do so, when she told reporters that to “include the (human rights) issue in the inter-Korean dialogue now is something that will require more preparatio­n.”

And in what critics took as an attempt to muzzle dissent, Moon this week asked “that our political circles halt their political warfare at least during the summit.”

“It is understand­able that Seoul wants to avoid annoying Pyongyang ahead of the April 27 inter-Korean summit. But in order for its policy to work, the government must open its ears to various voices on North Korea,” the conservati­ve Korea JoongAng Daily recently wrote. “The president cannot push ahead with (his) rapprochem­ent policy if (he) does not gain support from the people. Many conservati­ves believe the government is too soft toward Pyongyang.”

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE/GETTY-AFP ?? South Korean activists push for unificatio­n as they wear masks of South Korea’s, left, and North Korea’s leaders.
JUNG YEON-JE/GETTY-AFP South Korean activists push for unificatio­n as they wear masks of South Korea’s, left, and North Korea’s leaders.

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