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| North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Moon Jae-in met in the border truce village where they held their first summit last month (AFP Photo/Handout) |
North and South Korea's leaders held surprise talks on Saturday to get a historic summit between Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump back on track after a head-spinning series of twists and turns.
The meeting
is the latest remarkable diplomatic chapter in a roller coaster of developments
on the Korean peninsula.
Trump
rattled the region on Thursday by cancelling his meeting with Kim which had
been due to take place in Singapore on June 12, citing "open
hostility" from Pyongyang.
But within
24 hours he reversed course saying it could still go ahead after productive
talks were held with North Korean officials.
South
Korean President Moon Jae-in met with Kim Saturday for two hours in the truce
village of Panmunjom in an effort to ensure the landmark meeting between Trump
and the North Korean leader goes ahead.
"They
exchanged views and discussed ways to implement the Panmunjom Declaration and to
ensure a successful US North Korea summit," Seoul's presidential Blue
House said in a statement, referencing a declaration the two leaders signed
last month vowing to improve ties following their historic first meeting in the
same village.
Pictures
showed them shaking hands and embracing on the North Korean side of the
Demilitarised Zone separating the two nations.
The North's
state-run KCNA news agency said the two leaders agreed to "meet frequently
in the future to make dialogue brisk and pool wisdom and efforts, expressing
their stand to make joint efforts for the denuclearisation of the Korean
peninsula".
Specifically,
Moon and Kim will hold "high-level talks" on Friday, the agency
added.
Kim also
"expressed his fixed will on the historic DPRK-US summit talks," KCNA
added, using the official abbreviation for North Korea.
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Key meetings
between North Korea, South Korea, China and the United
States (AFP Photo/john
saeki)
|
Remarkable detente
Trump's
original decision to abandon the historic summit blindsided South Korea which
had been brokering a remarkable detente between Washington and Pyongyang.
However,
there was a further signal from the US Saturday the June 12 summit may yet go
ahead as the White House said it would send a team to Singapore to prepare for
the meeting.
"The
White House pre-advance team for Singapore will leave as scheduled in order to
prepare should the summit take place," White House press secretary Sarah
Sanders said.
Last year
Trump and Kim were trading war threats and insults after Pyongyang tested its
most powerful nuclear bomb to date and launched test missiles it said were
capable of reaching the United States.
Tensions
were calmed after Kim extended an olive branch by offering to send a delegation
to the Winter Olympics in South Korea, sparking a sudden detente that led to
Trump agreeing to hold direct talks with Pyongyang.
Moon won
election last year partly by vowing to be open to dialogue with Pyongyang and
finding a solution to a Cold War-era sore that continues to blight the region.
But the
flurry of diplomatic backslapping and bonhomie disappeared in recent weeks as
the summit was thrown into doubt by increasingly bellicose rhetoric from both
top US administration officials and Pyongyang.
Trump
eventually pulled the plug on talks in a personal letter to Kim on Thursday.
But he left
the door open to future meetings and Pyongyang responded by saying it was
willing to sit down "at any time", prompting Trump to reply that the
Singapore summit could still take place.
Saturday's
meeting between Moon and Kim took place in a grand building on the North Korean
side of Panmunjom, a heavily fortified village that lies between the two
countries and marks the spot where the armistice ending the Korean War in 1953
was signed.
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The
surprise meeting comes a day after US President Donald Trump said his
summit
with Kim Jong Un might go ahead after all (AFP Photo/Handout)
|
Only last
month the two leaders met in the same village, with Kim famously inviting Moon
to step briefly into the North before they both held talks in a building on the
South's side.
Koh
Yu-hwan, an expert on Korean relations at Dongguk University, said Saturday's
meeting between Moon and Kim increased the likelihood of the Singapore summit
taking place as originally intended.
"Today's
summit is aimed at resolving the misunderstanding caused by communication
glitches between Washington and Pyongyang and lay the groundwork for the
US-North Korea summit," he told AFP.
Adam Mount,
a nuclear policy expert at the Federation of American Scientists, said it was a
"bold but risky" move by Moon, describing the sudden summit as
"a clear demonstration of how dangerous Trump's temper tantrum was".
"Trump
says 'everybody plays games'. Moon Jae-in is not playing a game: he must keep
his people safe from war," he wrote on Twitter.
Utmost
secrecy
Unlike last
month's summit, which was held in front of live TV cameras, Saturday's meeting
took place in utmost secrecy, with reporters only being told later that the
face-to-face had taken place.
Footage
released by the Blue House on Twitter, accompanied by a dramatic orchestral
score, showed Moon arriving in a convoy of cars and first shaking hands with
Kim's sister Kim Yo Jong, who has played a major public role in recent talks
with the South, including leading a delegation across the border during February's
Winter Olympics.
Saturday's
talks were only the fourth time serving leaders of the two Koreas, who remain
technically at war, have ever met.



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