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Trump urged to continue Korean de-escalation process

IANS  |  Washington 

A leading US military academic has called on the Administration to step up and "keep the momentum going" with talks that could de-nuclearise the

"This is a major breakthrough," of the told on Tuesday as he mentioned North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's pledge to immediately freeze missile and nuclear weapons testing during the proposed talks with the US and

South Korean hammered out the talks and a summit next month between the two Koreas during a four-hour dinner with Kim, his wife and other senior North Korean officials.

The top for South Korean Moon Jae-in led a 10-member special delegation to visit for two days from Monday.

Both sides agreed to hold the third inter-Korean summit talks in late April.

The first and second inter-Korean summit meetings were held in in 2000 and 2007 respectively.

Goldstein urged US officials to address North Korea's "security needs", not to exclude a "symbolic withdrawal of some US troops," as a move that might bring both sides closer to detente.

"You must give in order to receive," Goldstein said, citing the recent talks failing because perceived it was getting nothing in return.

Goldstein also said the involvement of and might help the challenging negotiations that lie ahead, criticizing Japan's seeming lack of interest.

and also agreed to set up a hotline between the leaders to ease military tensions and closely coordinate. The first talks through the hotline will be held before the summit scheduled for late April.

--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: Wed, March 07 2018. 12:58 IST
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