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Kim Eui-keum, spokesman for RoK’s President Moon Jae-in, told
the routine press briefing that Pyongyang and Washington showed differences
in the issues.
The spokesman, however, noted that the two sides were seen as
being in the process of agreeing to the issues, including the war-ending
declaration.
The comments came after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's
visit to Pyongyang over the weekend.
Shortly after Pompeo left Pyongyang, the DPRK's foreign ministry
said in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) that
while the DPRK asked for simultaneous moves on formally declaring an end to
the 1950-53 Korean War and the denuclearization, the US side only insisted
that the DPRK take steps for the comprehensive, verifiable and irreversible
denuclearization (CVID).
Calling the US demand "unilateral" and
"gangster-like”, the DPRK foreign ministry said the US side never
mentioned the issue of establishing a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula.
After the historic summit in Singapore on June 12, DPRK leader
Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump agreed to denuclearize the Korean
Peninsula in return for security guarantees for the DPRK.
Pyongyang regards the signing of a formal agreement with
Washington to end the Korean War, which ended with armistice, as a key
measure to remove the danger of war on the peninsula and normalize the
DPRK-US relations. The peninsula remains technically at war with the
armistice agreement.
The Blue House spokesman noted that the first step cannot solve
everything as the DPRK and the United States held the first working-level
dialogue following the Singapore summit.
The spokesman said President Moon would make efforts to
facilitate DPRK-US talks, adding that RoK was communicating with Pyongyang
and Washington through various channels.
Other RoK’s officials expected Pyongyang and Washington to
eventually narrow differences to denuclearize and build peace on the
peninsula.
Moon Chung-in, professor emeritus of Yonsei University in Seoul
who serves as a special advisor to President Moon for security and foreign
affairs, said in a local radio program that Pyongyang and Washington would
overcome difference in a gradual manner though it would take time.
RoK’s Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon told a forum in Seoul
that the process of ironing out difference between Pyongyang and Washington
will be necessary in the initial phase of negotiations for the
denuclearization.
He said the leaders of the DPRK and the United States were
moving in the same direction and showing a clear will toward the
denuclearization.
Cho said RoK will closely communicate and cooperate with the
DPRK, the United States, all relevant parties and the international community
to create a virtuous cycle of the improved relations between Seoul and
Pyongyang and between Pyongyang and Washington advancing the denuclearization
and peace settlement.
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Source: NDO