The Philippine Star

NoKor snubs US plan to defer military drill with South

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SEOUL (AP) — North Korea said yesterday it won’t consider a recent US decision to postpone a joint military exercise with South Korea a major concession that can bring it back to nuclear talks.

Senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chol said the US must completely scrap that military drill and abandon its hostility against his country if it wants to see the resumption of the nuclear negotiatio­ns.

Kim’s comments were the first direct response to an announceme­nt Sunday by US Defense Secretary Mark Esper and his South Korean counterpar­t that the allies have indefinite­ly postponed the annual Vigilant Ace training in an “act of goodwill” toward North Korea.

The moves were regarded as an effort to convince North Korea to revive the nuclear talks that largely have stalled since the February collapse of a summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

“The US tries to make a good impression as if it contribute­s to peace and stability on the Korean peninsula, describing the suspension (of the aerial drill) as ‘considerat­ion for and concession’ to someone,” Kim Yong Chol said in a statement carried by state media. “But we demand that the US quit the drill or stop it once and for all.”

North Korea wants the United States to lift internatio­nal sanctions on it, provide security guarantees and make other concession­s in return for abandoning its advancing nuclear arsenal.

The February summit in Vietnam, the second such meeting between Trump and Kim Jong-un, fell apart after Trump rejected Kim’s demand for sweeping sanctions relief in exchange of dismantlin­g his main complex to produce nuclear ingredient­s, a limited disarmamen­t step.

The two leaders held an impromptu, brief meeting at the Korean border in late June and agreed to restart diplomacy.

In early October, their nuclear negotiator­s eventually resumed talks in Sweden, but the meeting failed to report progress.

North Korea said last week the US recently proposed via an unidentifi­ed third country its offer to meet again in December.

North Korea still said difference­s between the two countries won’t be addressed with minor concession­s like establishi­ng a liaison office between the countries or formally declaring the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

Kim Myong Gil, roving ambassador at the North’s Foreign Ministry, disclosed yesterday it was Sweden, which conveyed the US dialogue proposal.

 ?? AP ?? Photo released by the North Korean government on Monday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un with air force troops.
AP Photo released by the North Korean government on Monday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un with air force troops.

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