Seoul wants to ease Korean tensions
SOUTH KOREA: South Korea’s new liberal president said he’s willing to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un amid heightened animosities in the wake of the North’s first intercontinental ballistic missile testlaunch.
During a speech yesterday ahead of the Group of 20 summit in Germany, President Moon Jae In also proposed the two Koreas resume reunions of families separated by war, stop hostile activities along their heavily fortified border and co-operate on the 2018 Winter Olympics to be held in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Moon’s statement reiterated his push to use both dialogue and pressure to try to resolve the standoff over North Korea’s weapons programmes. But it’s unclear that North Korea would accept any of Moon’s overtures as South Korea is working with the United States and others to get the country punished for the ICBM launch on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump said yesterday he’s considering unspecified ``pretty severe things’' in response to the North’s ICBM launch. A pre-emptive military strike may be among Trump’s responses, but analysts say it’s one of the unlikeliest options the US can take because North Korean retaliations would cause massive casualties in South Korea.
``The current situation where there is no contact between the relevant officials of the South and the North is highly dangerous,’' Moon said.
``I am ready to meet with Chairman Kim Jong Un of North Korea at any time at any place, if the conditions are met and if it will provide an opportunity to transform the tension and confrontation on the Korean Peninsula.’'
Moon said he and Kim could put all issues on the negotiating table including the North’s nuclear programme and the signing of a peace treaty to officially end the 1950-53 Korean War. An armistice that ended the war has yet to be completed with a peace treaty, leaving the Korean Peninsula in a technical state of war. – AP