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Koreas seek
formal end to Korean war
Foreign Desk Report
SEOUL—Leaders of the two Koreas agreed on Thursday to try to bring peace
to the Cold War’s last frontier, just a day after the North signed up to
an international deal to disable its nuclear facilities.
But some analysts said the pledges at only the second summit between
North and South Korea were limited, with the hermit North clearly
reluctant to break much new ground.
“North and South Korea shared the view they must end the current
armistice and build a permanent peace regime,” President Roh Moo-hyun
and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il said in a joint statement at the end
of their three-day meeting in Pyongyang. They will push for talks next
month with China and the United States to formally end the 1950-53
Korean War, which technically is still going on because a peace treaty
has yet to be signed.
If Beijing and Washington did agree, it would mark an end at last to the
Cold War in the region but the United States has already made clear that
one condition would be for Pyongyang to give up all nuclear weapons —
something the North shows no sign of being in a hurry to do. The two
leaders also agreed to set up the first regular freight train service
for half a century, linking two countries divided by a heavily fortified
border. There will also be meetings of ministers and defense officials
and the establishment of a cooperation zone around a contested sea
border on the west of the Korean peninsula.
The summit ended just a day after North Korea agreed to disable the
three main nuclear facilities at its Yongbyon site — and a source of
material for atomic weapons — and provide a full declaration of all its
nuclear programs by the end of the year.
U.S. President George W. Bush was quick to praise the nuclear deal with
North Korea, a country he once linked with Iran and pre-invasion Iraq as
members of an “axis of evil.” He even held up North Korea as a possible
model for resolving the nuclear standoff with Iran. Roh left Pyongyang,
where thousands lined the streets waving plastic flowers and cheering
“hurray” as his motorcade headed to the South.
Roh went to the summit declaring it would make the peninsula safer and
help the North’s shattered economy, but many analysts were doubtful he
would be able to win concessions from the reclusive Kim. And even Roh
said he found it difficult to break down a wall of mistrust from Kim
whom analysts say fears that opening up his secretive state too much to
foreign influence could undermine the personality cult around his rule
and threaten his own position.
“I expected much stronger results such as large-scale aid or support for
North Korea. The results are more moderate than I had expected,” said
Kim Young-yoon, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National
Unification. “South Korea very aggressively proposed many projects and
businesses but on the other hand North Korea seems to have been passive
and not willing to accept all of them.”
South Korean officials say relations can improve only gradually and that
a collapse of the North would be so catastrophic for wealthy South Korea
that they were prepared to pump billions of dollars into their
neighbor’s economy. “This is an event that will open a new horizon
between North and South Korea,” presidential spokesman Kim Jeong-suob
told reporters in Seoul. Wednesday’s agreement to disable the Yongbyon
complex came a year after North Korea tested a nuclear device, earning
it international sanctions that analysts say have hit hard. The deal
essentially puts North Korea back to where it was over a decade ago — as
Kim Jong-il was taking over from his father as the North’s autocratic
ruler — when it agreed to freeze its nuclear program in exchange for
aid.
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