N. Korea willing to hold talks with US, says S. Korea

IANS  |  Seoul 

North is willing to hold talks with the US, South says.

The announcement came after Gen. Kim Yong-chol, who headed North Korea's delegation to the Pyeongchang Winter closing ceremony, met South Korean Moon Jae-in before the closing ceremony of Olympics, reported on Sunday.

The responded by saying nuclear disarmament must be the end goal of "any dialogue".

"We will see if Pyongyang's message today, that it is willing to hold talks, represents the first steps," it said in a statement.

has not confirmed the offer, but it has often said it is willing to talk without any preconditions.

US Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka also attended the closing ceremony, but she is not expected to talk with any North Koreans, even though she sat a few feet from Gen. Kim at the

The has been divided since the 1950-53 war and the two sides have never signed a peace treaty.

The rapprochement between the two Koreas has been seen as a move by the North to drive a wedge between the South and the US.

Experts have cautioned that the latest developments do not put an end to underlying regional tensions, particularly following last year's nuclear and missile tests carried out by the North.

The Pyeongchang Winter ended as it started with geopolitics being played out in a packed stadium and in front of a global television audience.

The US president's daughter, Ivanka Trump, sat one row in front of North Korean Two seats down from him was Gen Vincent Brooks, in South and in the middle of them all -- Moon Jae-in, giving handshakes all round.

South Korea's Moon has tried to bring and together at these He's met two rounds of delegations from both countries and his message has been clear: You need to talk.

We could be some way off any major discussions between them -- we have heard of the North's readiness to talk to the US before and it's led to nothing.

But coming after a period of such high tension on the Korean peninsula, this does seem to show a shift in mood all round.

And, if there is a breakthrough of sorts, many will remember Moon's Winter Olympic strategy as the time it all began.

While South Korea's held out a hand to Gen. Kim, not everyone in his country was as accepting.

Gen. Kim has been accused of orchestrating attacks on the Cheonan warship and in 2010, leading to the death of 46 South Korean sailors.

He arrived in the South with families of the victims and conservative MPs trying to block his entry.

According to Moon's office, he said North was "very willing" to hold talks with the US.

It added that the North had "agreed that inter-talks and North-US relations should improve together".

The revelation from the South Korean presidency came hours after a furious statement from the North that described fresh sanctions announced by as "an act of war".

Pyongyang's foreign ministry praised the way the two Koreas had co-operated together during the Olympics, but said the US had "brought the threat of war to the with large-scale new sanctions" just as the Games were coming to a close.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 26 2018. 06:06 IST
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