Korea talks raise hopes; history may scuttle them
FOSTER KLUG, AP
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The two Koreas will hold their highest-level talks in years Wednesday
in an effort to restore scrapped joint economic projects and ease
animosity marked by recent
threats of nuclear war. That in itself is progress, though there are
already hints that disputes in their bloody history could thwart efforts
to better ties.
Still, just setting up the two-day meeting in Seoul, through a 17-hour negotiating session that ended early Monday,
required the kind of diplomatic resolve that has long been absent in
inter-Korean relations, and analysts say it could be a tentative new
start. It's also a political and diplomatic victory for new South Korean
President Park Geun-hye, who expressed her country's interest in talks
and rebuilding trust even as she batted back
North Korean war rhetoric with vows to hit back strongly if attacked.
"It's
very significant that they're sitting down and talking at all ... after
all the heated rhetoric this spring," said John Delury, an analyst at
Seoul's Yonsei University. "It shows
political will. Both sides could have called it off."
The
main topics will be stalled rapprochement projects left over from
friendlier days, including the resumption of operations at a jointly run
factory park just north of the border. It
was the last remaining symbol of inter-Korean cooperation until
Pyongyang pulled out its workers in April during heightened tensions
that followed its February nuclear test.
North Korea, however, is also pushing for something Seoul hasn't agreed to: A discussion Wednesday of how to jointly commemorate past inter-Korean statements, including the anniversary
Saturday
of a statement settled during a landmark 2000 summit between liberal
President Kim Dae-jung and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, the current
ruler's late father.
This matters to North Korea because the June 15
statement from the 2000 summit, along with another 2007 leaders'
summit, include both important symbolic nods to future reconciliation
and also economic cooperation agreements that would benefit the North
financially.
Those
commitments faded after Park's conservative predecessor, Lee Myung-bak,
took office in 2008. His insistence that large-scale government aid be
linked to North Korea making progress
on past commitments to abandon its nuclear ambitions drew a furious
reaction from Pyongyang. Relations deteriorated further in 2010 after a
North Korean bombardment of a South Korean island killed four people,
and the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan
killed 46 sailors.
A
Seoul-led international investigation blamed a North Korean torpedo for
the Cheonan attack, and South Korea has demanded an apology from the
North before it will allow any exchanges.
Pyongyang denies any role in the sinking, and the two sides will
presumably bring those irreconcilable positions with them Wednesday.
Since
her presidential campaign, Park has mixed a tough line with policies of
engagement, aid and reconciliation with the North — a recognition of
the frustration many South Koreans felt
about Lee's hard-line policies.
Analyst
Park Hyeong-jung said North Korea wants the past statements on the
agenda to forge a "relationship that is to their advantage. They want to
hold the present South Korean administration
accountable for the declarations of past administrations."
"This
is the first time in a long time both sides are meeting," said Park, a
senior research fellow at the government-affiliated Korea Institute for
National Unification in Seoul. "Rather
than a breakthrough, this week's talks are only the beginning."
Both
Koreas have also agreed to discuss resuming South Korean tours to a
North Korean mountain resort and the reunion of separated families,
officials said.
There's
little chance that the narrowly defined talks will tackle the crucial
question of pushing Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear bombs. North Korea
has said it will never give them
up, though the U.S. and other countries say it must if it is to rebuild
its relationship with the rest of the world.
It's still unclear who will represent each side Wednesday.
Seoul said it will send a senior-level official responsible for North
Korea-related issues while Pyongyang said it would send
a senior-level government official, without elaborating. A
minister-level summit between the Koreas has not happened since 2007.
Dialogue
at any level marks a positive sign in the countries' recent history,
which has seen North Korean nuclear tests and long-range rocket
launches. The armistice ending the three-year
Korean War that was signed 60 years ago next month hasn't been replaced
with a peace treaty, leaving the Korean Peninsula technically at war.
Analysts
express wariness about North Korea's intentions, with some seeing the
interest in dialogue as part of a pattern where Pyongyang follows
aggressive rhetoric and provocations with
diplomatic efforts to trade an easing of tension for outside
concessions.
After
U.N. sanctions were strengthened following North Korea's third nuclear
test in February, Pyongyang, which is estimated to have a handful of
crude nuclear devices, threatened nuclear
war and missile strikes against Seoul and Washington, pulled its
workers from the jointly run factory park at the North Korean border
town of Kaesong and vowed to ramp up production of nuclear bomb fuel.
Seoul withdrew its last personnel from Kaesong in May.
Chang
Yong-seok, a senior researcher at Seoul National University's Institute
for Peace and Unification Studies, said he is optimistic that the
Koreas can resume work at Kaesong and reunions
for separated families. But he said a quick breakthrough is unlikely
because North Korea's gesture for closer ties runs counter to South
Korea's demand for apologies.
———
AP writer Elizabeth Shim contributed to this report from Seoul
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