The Mercury News

Koreas try to ease tension after cross- border firing

Senior unificatio­n, defense chiefs from each side hold talks

- By Jonathan Kaiman Los Angeles Times

SEOUL — North and South Korean officials met at a town on the heavily guarded border between the two countries Saturday in a bid to defuse tensions days after a volley of crossborde­r artillery fire put both countries’ armed forces on high alert.

Four high- ranking officials — two from the North and two from the South — met at the border truce village of Panmunjom on Saturday evening, according to local media.

The delegates agreed to resume the meeting at 3 p. m. Sunday South Korean time , said Seoul’s presidenti­al spokesman Min Kyungwook. Min did not disclose any other details about the talks, which adjourned at 4: 15 a. m. Sunday.

North Korea warned on Friday that it would launch an attack if South Korea did not stop blaring anti- Pyongyang propaganda from borderside loudspeake­rs by 5 p. m. Saturday. The deadline passed without any reported incidents, and the two sides met shortly afterward.

The two countries, technicall­y at war since the 1950s, entered a period of heightened tensions in mid- August, when Seoul accused North Korean soldiers of sneaking across the border and planting land mines near a military post. Seoul retaliated by activating the loudspeake­rs for the first time since 2004. On Thursday, North Korea lobbed a projectile at one of the loudspeake­rs, and South Korea fired dozens of artillery shells at the source of the attack.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has ordered the border region to enter a “semi state of war,” according to the state- run Korean Central News Agency.

South Korea sent national security director Kim Kwan- jin and Unificatio­n Minister Hong Yong- pyo as representa­tives to the talks, according to the Associated Press; the North sent Hwang Pyong So, Kim’s top military aide, and Kim Yong Gon, a senior official responsibl­e for South Korean affairs.

“The senior status of the negotiator­s from the two delegation­s — they are the de facto defense and unificatio­n chiefs from both sides — and the speed with which this meeting was set up shows how gravely the current situation is viewed in both Pyongyang and Seoul,” said Andrew Salmon, a Seoul- based historian and author of two books on the Korean War.

Local media ran photos of the four men smiling and shaking hands at the meeting’s outset. Some of the participan­ts also attended talks in October when North Korean officials made a surprise visit to the South Korean city of Incheon, which was then hosting the Asian Games, a major sports event. The two sides have not held any high- level talks since.

The U. N. Command proposed engaging North Korea in talks to ease the cross- border tensions, according to South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency. China, North Korea’s most important ally and benefactor, and the U. S. also made statements calling for calm.

On Friday, South Korean President Park Geun- hye made a surprise visit to an army headquarte­rs and instructed troops to respond strongly to any North Korean provocatio­n. “We can never tolerate any North Korean provocatio­ns that could endanger the safety of our soldiers and people,” Park said, according to Yonhap.

Tough rhetoric between the two sides isn’t unusual.

 ?? SOUTH KOREAN UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRYVI­A GETTY IMAGES ?? Counterclo­ckwise from right: South Korean officials Kim Kwan- jin and Hong Yong- pyo shake hands with top North Korean officials Kim Yong Gon and Hwang Pyong So on Saturday near the border to try defuse tensions that have escalated in recent days.
SOUTH KOREAN UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRYVI­A GETTY IMAGES Counterclo­ckwise from right: South Korean officials Kim Kwan- jin and Hong Yong- pyo shake hands with top North Korean officials Kim Yong Gon and Hwang Pyong So on Saturday near the border to try defuse tensions that have escalated in recent days.

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