Seoul (AFP) - North Korea and the United States will hold working-level nuclear talks on Saturday, Pyongyang said, signalling the resumption of dialogue that has been effectively stalled since the collapse of a summit in February.
The two
sides agreed to have "preliminary contact" on October 4 and hold
negotiations the following day, the North's vice foreign minister Choe Son Hui
said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.
"It is
my expectation that the working-level negotiations would accelerate the
positive development of the DPRK-US relations," she added without
disclosing a venue.
US State
Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus later confirmed the talks, which she said
would happen "within the next week".
Negotiations
between Pyongyang and Washington have been gridlocked since a second summit
between North Korea's Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump in February ended
without a deal.
The two
agreed to restart dialogue during an impromptu meeting at the Demilitarized
Zone dividing the two Koreas in June, but the North's anger at a US refusal to
cancel joint military deals with South Korea put the process on hold.
Relations
thawed last month after Trump fired his hawkish national security advisor John
Bolton, who Pyongyang had repeatedly denounced as a warmonger.
North
Korea's chief negotiator also responded positively to Trump's suggestion that
the two sides try a "new method" of approaching their discussions.
Trump had
criticised Bolton's suggestion of the "Libyan model" for North Korea,
a reference to a denuclearisation deal with the African nation's former
dictator Moamer Kadhafi -- who was killed after being deposed in 2011.
Pyongyang
had bristled at that comment, which Trump said "set us back very
badly".
Consensus
reached?
Despite the
gridlock, Pyongyang has continued to praise Trump, calling him "bold"
and "wise".
Analysts
say Bolton's dismissal from the White House could have helped Pyongyang's
decision to return to the table.
South
Korea's presidential Blue House welcomed Tuesday's announcement.
"We
hope to see the realisation of practical steps towards permanent peace regime
and complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula through the upcoming talks,"
said spokeswoman Ko Min-jung.
The
announcement on the new talks could be an "indication" that the two
sides have narrowed their differences behind the scenes, said Koh Yu-hwan,
professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul.
"The
North has demanded security guarantees in return for denuclearisation measures
and called on the US to come up with 'new calculation', he said.
"Consensus
between the two might have been reached regarding the matter in the lead-up to
the Tuesday announcement," he added.

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