Jakarta Globe – AFP, February 13, 2014
US
Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Seoul Thursday for discussions on
North Korea’s nuclear program, a day after high-level inter-Korean talks failed
to resolve a row over looming South Korea-US military drills.
South Korea
was Kerry’s first stop on an Asia tour that will also take him to China and
Indonesia, with a focus on regional tensions stoked by China’s territorial
claims.
As well as
discussing efforts to rein in Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons programme, Kerry will
be briefed in Seoul on a diplomatic initiative that saw the two Koreas sit down
Wednesday for their highest-level official talks since 2007.
The
discussions ran late into the night, and ended without any tangible agreement
or joint statement, although Seoul said both sides had committed to keep the
dialogue going.
Although
there had been no fixed agenda, the South had focused on ensuring that a
planned reunion later this month for family members separated by the 1950-53
Korean War goes ahead as scheduled.
The February
20-25 event overlaps with the start of South Korea’s annual joint military
exercises with the United States, which Pyongyang has denounced as provocative.
The North
side demanded the joint drills be postponed until after the reunion was over,
but the South’s Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl–Jae said Friday the request had
been turned down.
“The
government made it clear this is unacceptable,” Ryoo told parliament.
There was
no immediate comment from North Korea.
Briefing
reporters in Seoul, presidential spokesman Min Kyung-Wook indicated that the
talks had been a good opportunity for the two rivals to sound each other out.
“We’ve
become clearly aware of North Korea’s intentions, and this was also an
opportunity for us to clearly explain our principles,” he quoted a government
official as saying.
Kerry to
seek China pressure on North Korea
It was not
clear if there was any discussion of North Korea’s nuclear program, which will
be the main focus of Kerry’s visit.
In Beijing,
Kerry is expected to push China to exert more pressure on its ally to prove it
is serious about wanting to restart the six-party process.
“The days
are long gone when the international community will take North Korea’s IOU …
words alone will not do,” a State Department official told reporters flying
with Kerry.
North Korea
had the opportunity to end its international isolation but had to take
“convincing steps,” the official said, adding that Washington wanted to turn
“denuclearization from a noun into a verb.”
The US has
also repeatedly called for the isolated North to release Kenneth Bae, a
Korean-American missionary who was sentenced to 15 years’ hard labor last year
on sedition charges.
The State
Department on Tuesday again voiced frustration that an invitation to US envoy
Robert King to discuss Bae’s case was extended on February 5 but withdrawn just
three days later.
US
officials called on North Korea to show “compassion” for the 45-year-old, who
is forced to work 10 to 12 hours a day even though his health is failing.
During his
brief stay in Seoul, Kerry will meet President Park Geun-Hye, who came to
office a year ago on a campaign promise of greater engagement with Pyongyang.
Wednesday’s
talks, which were held at Pyongyang’s instigation, had raised hopes that the
two sides might be ready to embark on a genuine trust-building dialogue.
But South
Korea remains wary of the impoverished North’s intentions, suggesting that
Pyongyang’s only real desire is to see the resumption of several lucrative
cross-border projects.
Paik
Hak-Soon, an analyst at the Sejong Institute in Seoul, stressed there was still
room for optimism.
“At least
these senior officials met for the first time in a very long time,” Paik said.
“You can’t expect them to produce a major decision at the first meeting. They
go back to the capitals, talk with their leaders and will likely meet again
after the South-US army drill is over,” he added.
Agence France-Presse

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