South Korean President informs Trump of arrangement to send Diplomats to North Korea
South Korea plans to send a special envoy to North Korea in response to an invitation from leader Kim Jong Un, South Korean President Moon Jae-in told his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump in a phone call on Thursday.
The two presidents discussed the recent visits to the south by high-level North Korean officials,
the South Korean presidential Blue House said in a statement.
The Olympics gave a boost to recent engagement between the two Koreans after more than a year of sharply rising tensions over the North’s missile programme and its sixth and
largest nuclear test in defiance of U.N. sanctions.
“(Moon and Trump) agreed to continue to make efforts to head toward the Korean peninsula’s denuclearization by maintaining the momentum of South-North dialogue,” the Blue House statement
said.
In Washington, a White
House statement on the two leaders’ call said Moon briefed Trump “on developments regarding North Korea and inter-Korean talks” but did not
elaborate.
“President Trump and
President Moon noted their firm position that any dialogue with North Korea must be conducted with the explicit and unwavering goal of complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization,” the White House said.
In sending an envoy to
Pyongyang, Moon said he would be seeking to reciprocate for the senior delegations dispatched to the Olympics by Kim Jong Un, including his sister,Kim Yo Jong, the first visit by a member of the North’s ruling bloodline since
the 1950-53 Korean War.
Senior officials from
Pyongyang visiting South Korea for the Winter Olympics said on Sunday their
government was open to talks with the United States, while the White House said
any talks with North Korea must lead to an end to its nuclear programme.
Moon has urged North Korea and the United States to talk to resolve the issue of Pyongyang’s weapons programme, which Kim has said he will never abandon.
In the latest attempt to
defuse the crisis over North Korea’s weapons programme, Seoul urged Washington
and Pyongyang to give ground to allow for talks. “Both leaders agreed to continue close consultations on the progress of South-North Korea dialogue that will go on,” the statement said.https://www.semperdiamondlodge.com
Comments
Post a Comment