Oman Daily Observer

North Korea working on new missiles: US officials

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SEOUL: North and South Korea discussed reducing tension but didn’t announce any detailed agreements after military talks on Tuesday, while the United States detected renewed activity at a North Korean missile factory, casting more suspicion over the North’s intentions.

The meeting, the second since June and held in the border village of Panmunjom, was designed to follow on from an inter-korean summit in April at which leaders of the two Koreas agreed to defuse tension and halt “all hostile acts.” North Korean leader Kim Jong Un also vowed during his separate summit with US President Donald Trump in Singapore in June to work toward denucleari­sation, but there has been no concrete agreement to accomplish that goal.

The North had pursued its nuclear and missile programmes in defiance of UN Security Council resolution­s and increasing­ly severe sanctions.

Generals from the two Koreas exchanged views on a possible cut in firearms and personnel to “demilitari­se” the heavily fortified demilitari­sed zone (DMZ), as well as joint excavation within the area of the remains of soldiers killed in the 195053 Korean War. They also discussed ways to turn the skirmish-prone West Sea by ceasing firing exercises and withdrawin­g artillery along the shore, according to South Korea’s defence ministry. But they did not agree on details, which will be further discussed through working-level talks, the ministry said.

The ministry said last week it plans to reduce guard posts and equipment along the heavily fortified border as an initial step. The talks were meaningful in “creating understand­ing” in ways to implement the summit agreement, said Kim Do-gyun, the South’s chief negotiator who is in charge of North Korea policy at the ministry.

Ahn Ik-san, the general leading the North Korean delegation at the military talks, said both sides agreed on “some issues”, without elaboratin­g.

At the start of the meeting, Ahn noted South Korean news reports suggesting that he might try to persuade the South to push for a joint declaratio­n with the United States to formally end the war.

The Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty, leaving the Us-led United Nations forces, including South Korea, technicall­y still at war with the North. Pyongyang sees an official end to war as crucial to lowering tension.

It accused US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo of making a “gangsterli­ke” demand for denucleari­sation during his visit to Pyongyang earlier this month, while rejecting its wish to discuss declaring an end to the conflict. The US State Department has said it is committed to building a peace mechanism in place of the armistice when the North denucleari­ses.

Chinese State Councillor Yang Jiechi had travelled to South Korea “not long ago” and held talks with Chung Eui-yong, Director of the National Security Office, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told media on Tuesday.

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