Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

KOREAS CAN’T

Leaders set to meet, but other nations have stake in armistice

- KIM TONG-HYUNG

negotiate end to ’50-53 war without rest of nations that fought in it.

SEOUL, South Korea — President Donald Trump has given his “blessing” for North and South Korea to discuss the end of the Korean War amid a diplomatic push to end the North Korean nuclear standoff.

But there can be no real talks without the involvemen­t of the other countries that fought the 1950-53 war, including the United States, because South Korea wasn’t a direct signatory to the armistice that stopped the fighting but left the Korean Peninsula still technicall­y in a state of war.

There is widespread interest in what South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will discuss at their April 27 summit, which would be only the third such meeting between the countries’ leaders. A separate meeting between Kim and Trump is anticipate­d in May or June.

Trump revealed Tuesday that the U.S. and North Korea had been holding direct talks at “extremely high levels” in preparatio­n for their summit. Trump also said at the time that North and South Korea are negotiatin­g an end to hostilitie­s before next week’s summit.

“They do have my blessing to discuss the end of the war,” Trump said.

A senior South Korean presidenti­al official said Wednesday that the Koreas plan to use their summit to discuss ending military hostilitie­s, but it wasn’t clear if they’d discuss the end of the war.

“We don’t know yet whether a specific expression like ‘end of the war’ will be used during the inter-Korean summit, but we do wish for an agreement at ending hostilitie­s between the South and North,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing office rules.

North Korea has long sought a peace treaty with the United States to formally end the war. Some South Koreans fear that the North could use such a treaty as a pretext for

demanding the withdrawal of the 28,500 American troops currently stationed in the South. Some worry that potential discussion­s to formally end the war may distract from already difficult efforts to rid the North of nuclear weapons and apply robust verificati­on of that process.

The armistice was signed by the U.S.-led United Nations Command, North Korea and China. South Korea was a member of the U.N. Command but was not a direct signatory.

In their previous summit in 2007, the Koreas declared a commitment toward ending the war and vowed to pursue discussion­s with others. But the efforts faltered and the relations between the rivals worsened after a conservati­ve government took office in Seoul in February 2008.

 ?? AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON ?? South Korean soldiers walk Wednesday past military vehicles from the Korean War era that now sit on display in a war museum in Seoul.
AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON South Korean soldiers walk Wednesday past military vehicles from the Korean War era that now sit on display in a war museum in Seoul.

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