Rare dialog between divided Koreas set for Wednesday
Nuclear negotiations are unlikely to be on the table as North Korea blows hot and cold over US-South Korea war games due later this month.
Nuclear negotiations are unlikely to be on the table as North Korea blows hot and cold over US-South Korea war games due later this month.
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In a reversal of its recent bellicose stance, North Korea is apparently the main instigator for rare high-level talks scheduled to be held Wednesday between the two Koreas.聽
There is no fixed agenda for the meeting, and the two countries 鈥 divided in the aftermath of World War II 鈥 are expected to discuss family reunions and annual South Korea-US military drills, reports Reuters. If the talks take place, they would be the weightiest official dialog between the Koreas since 2007.
That's a big "if." As Time reports, 鈥渢he North is prone to sudden U-turns.鈥 Earlier this month North Korea agreed to, then threatened to cancel scheduled family reunions, citing a US military sortie. And on Monday, it withdrew an invitation for a US official to travel to North Korea, potentially to secure the release of an American prisoner held there, Kenneth Bae. In September, a separate proposed round of reunions was canceled.
"It's premature to say whether this will lead to any breakthrough or policy change," Kim Yong-Hyun, a professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul, told Agence France-Presse. He noted that if the talks happen, regardless of their outcome, it would be "meaningful."
"A clearer answer will come after the meeting, but it will provide an opportunity for both sides to read the minds of their leaders," Mr. Kim said.
According to The Associated Press, 鈥渋t's unlikely that North Korea will halt the reunions this time because it needs improved ties with South Korea to help attract foreign investment and aid.鈥
South Korea鈥檚 deputy national security adviser will attend Wednesday鈥檚 talks, while North Korea plans to send a senior Worker鈥檚 Party official. North Korea鈥檚 expected demands include resuming a joint tourism project, increasing humanitarian aid, and reduced US-South Korean joint military drills, a South Korean academic Yoo Ho-Yeol told the AP.
When it comes to investment, Korea expert Aidan Foster-Carter argues that North Korea may be trying to diversify its dependence on China, and the next logical place to look is South Korea.
海角大神 noted last month that since taking power over 鈥渢he world鈥檚 most secretive鈥 nation in 2011, leader Kim Jung-un has yet to meet with any world leaders, and many North Korea observers are preoccupied by how little is known about Mr. Kim and what drives him.
鈥淧urges in the North rose in the past year, and the number of public executions, which had been falling, doubled,鈥 the Monitor reports.