New Straits Times

N. Korea: Peace treaty not a bargaining chip in US nuke deal

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SEOUL: North Korea yesterday ruled out dismantlin­g its nuclear arsenal in exchange for the United States declaring an end to the Korean War, saying a peace treaty should “never be a bargaining chip”.

The North has for decades demanded that the US formally declare the end of the 1950-53 conflict that was halted only with an armistice, saying an official end to the war would ease tensions on the flashpoint peninsula.

At a summit with the South’s President Moon Jae-in last month, the North’s leader Kim Jong-un offered to shut down its main Yongbyon nuclear complex if Washington takes “correspond­ing measures”.

Kim did not elaborate on what those measure might be, but state news agency KCNA said in a commentary that some US experts have suggested trading the end of the war for denucleari­sation.

It described that as only the “most basic... process” to restore ties, not a point for negotiatio­n.

“The end of war... is not just a gift from a man to another at all. Furthermor­e, it can never be a bargaining chip for getting the DPRK denucleari­sed,” it said, using the North’s full name.

KCNA said that Pyongyang was willing to take “such... steps as eternal dismantlem­ent” of its nuclear complex “if the US takes a correspond­ing measure”, but again did not elaborate.

Cho Sung-ryul, analyst at the Institute of National Security Strategy, said the commentary might be aimed at limiting Washington’s room for manoeuvre.

“The North is trying to reduce the negotiatin­g value of Washington’s potential offer of a peace treaty, by suggesting that ‘it’s not good enough to make us denucleari­se’,” he told South Korea’s news agency Yonhap.

A landmark summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump in June led to a warming of ties, but there has been little concrete progress toward denucleari­sation.

The North’s foreign minister Ri Yong Ho also told the UN last month that there was “no way” his country would disarm first as long as the US pushes for tough enforcemen­t of sanctions against Pyongyang.

Trump, however, lauded Kim, saying last week, the pair had fallen “in love” — their bromance fuelled by “beautiful letters” he recently received from the young leader.

The ceasefire that halted the bloody conflict that sealed the division of the Korean peninsula was signed by the North, its military ally China and the US, which fought on the side of the South.

The South did not take part as its then-leader refused to end the war unless the whole peninsula was unified.

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