South Korea welcomes dialogue with North but no easing of sanctions

Moon Jae-in pledges tougher sanctions if Pyongyang tests another nuclear weapon

South Korean president Moon Jae-in: “I am giving a lot of credit to President Trump . . . I am expressing my gratitude,” he said, of the US president’s role in the Korean talks.  Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji /EPA
South Korean president Moon Jae-in: “I am giving a lot of credit to President Trump . . . I am expressing my gratitude,” he said, of the US president’s role in the Korean talks. Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji /EPA

President Moon Jae-in has said South Korea would introduce tougher sanctions if North Korea resumed nuclear tests, and credited US president Donald Trump with playing a major role in bringing about dialogue with Pyongyang.

"We will work to help resolve the North Korean nuclear issue by seeking improvements in the South-North Korea relationship through dialogue but should the North stage an additional provocation, the international community will continue to put strong sanctions," Mr Moon told a news conference in the presidential Blue House in Seoul.

“And our government too will have no choice but to push for both [dialogue and sanctions],” he said.

He was speaking one day after inter-Korean talks to discuss the North’s participation in the Winter Olympics, to be held in the South Korean city of Pyeongchang next month.

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The talks in the “peace village” of Panmunjom at the demilitarised zone (DMZ) were the first between the two Koreas since 2015 and they opened the door to further dialogue, possibly including the North’s nuclear weapons programme.

North Korea said it would send a delegation to the games, including a team of taekwondo martial arts athletes, cheerleaders, journalists and officials.

A slanging match between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and Mr Trump, and strong rhetoric from the US president about willingness to use force against the North, had jangled nerves in the region.

Thanking Trump

Some analysts feared that the bilateral talks between the two Koreas were an attempt by the North to drive a wedge between the South and the US. Mr Trump has claimed credit in a tweet for bringing about the talks, and Mr Moon underlined the strength of the relationship between Washington and Seoul, and thanked Mr Trump for his help.

“I am giving a lot of credit to President Trump . . . I am expressing my gratitude,” he said.

South Korea would work towards reopening the inter-Korean Kaesong industrial park and ending the prohibition of cross-border economic activities, but the nuclear issue needed to be resolved for this to happen.

“The South-North Korean issue can be improved when the North Korean nuclear issue is resolved and once the South-North Korean relations are improved, they can help resolve the North Korean nuclear issue,”he said.

"I will do my best to make this year a new start for peace on the Korean Peninsula. In the process, I will co-operate more closely with related countries, including our ally, the US, China and Japan, and the rest of the international community," Mr Moon said.

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan, an Irish Times contributor, spent 15 years reporting from Beijing