The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump, Kim could declare end to Korean War – Seoul

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SEOUL: Hopes that Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un will formally declare an end to the 1950-53 Korean War at the Hanoi summit rose yesterday, after South Korea said the two leaders could reach an agreement.

The devastatin­g conflict between communist North Korea, backed by China, and the capitalist South, aided by the United States, ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, leaving Pyongyang and Washington still technicall­y at war.

“I believe that the possibilit­y is there,” the South’s presidenti­al Blue House spokesman Kim Euikyeom told reporters about a formal declaratio­n.

“There is no way of knowing what kind of declaratio­n it might be, but I believe the US and North Korea may reach an agreement.”

President Moon Jae-in said in October “it was only a matter of time” before Washington and Pyongyang declared an end to the war.

The US has also struck an upbeat tone. Stephen Biegun, the US special envoy for North Korea, said earlier this month that Trump was “ready to end this war”, fuelling speculatio­n that the formal end of the conflict may be near.

Kim, the leader of North Korea, is due to meet the US president in the Vietnamese capital on Wednesday and Thursday, where it is hoped the pair will make progress in talks on denucleari­sation, and a possible peace treaty.

But Blue House spokesman Kim said even if the US and North Korean leaders declare the end of the Korean War, a formal peace treaty will likely be signed at the “last stage of the denucleari­sation process” of the Korean peninsula — and may take a long time to materialis­e.

“A peace treaty and a declaratio­n of end of war are different,” he said, adding that the treaty must be a “multilater­al effort” involving South Korea and China.

North Korea, the US-led United Nations Command and China were all signatorie­s to the armistice.

The Hanoi summit comes after Trump and Kim met in June in Singapore, producing a vaguely worded agreement on denucleari­sation, but progress has since stalled, with the two sides disagreein­g over what the agreement meant.

Observers say tangible progress is needed in Hanoi to avoid the talks being dismissed as a publicity stunt.

Meanwhile the respected US-based website 38 North reported on Monday there is no indication Pyongyang is operating its nuclear reactors at the Yongbyon complex.

The dismantlin­g of the complex is expected to be among the key denucleari­sation steps that the US and North Korean leaders will likely discuss in Hanoi.

“There is no steam venting from the generator hall, nor is there any hot water effluent at the cooling water outfall pipe,” the website said. — AFP

There is no way of knowing what kind of declaratio­n it might be, but I believe the US and North Korea may reach an agreement. Kim Eui-kyeom, South Korea’s Blue House spokesman

 ??  ?? Members of the US delegation are seen outside Marriott hotel ahead of the North Korea-US summit in Hanoi, Vietnam. — Reuters photo
Members of the US delegation are seen outside Marriott hotel ahead of the North Korea-US summit in Hanoi, Vietnam. — Reuters photo

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