Post by dustdevil28 on Oct 1, 2007 10:45:59 GMT -8
SEOUL, South Korea - South Korea's president is headed for a summit with the North's Kim Jong Il, saying he will seek peace on the peninsula in the second such meeting between the divided nation's leaders.
The three-day meeting in Pyongyang, starting Tuesday, will mark the first extended appearance of the enigmatic, authoritarian Kim before the world since the two Koreas' only other summit in June 2000. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun is scheduled to deliver a speech Tuesday before departing by road for Pyongyang — stepping out of his armored car for a stroll into the heavily armed Demilitarized Zone, the front line marking the 54-year-old cease-fire between the North and South that halted the Korean War.
The meeting comes at a time of talks over disarmament, with North Korean negotiators set to respond Tuesday to the latest road map. Almost exactly a year ago, the North tested a nuclear bomb, rattling regional stability and leading to a dramatic turnaround in the previously hard-line U.S. policy. Since then, Pyongyang has shut down its sole operating nuclear reactor — which produced material for bombs — and has tentatively agreed to disable its atomic facilities by year-end in a way that they cannot easily be relaunched.
Accompanied by industry leaders, politicians and cultural figures, Roh will spend hours in dialogue with Kim, tour the country and watch the spectacle of thousands of synchronized performers glorifying the North's communist regime. On Monday, amid the echoes of artillery during a ceremony commemorating the South's Armed Forces Day, Roh stressed that peace can only come from a position of strength.
"It would be difficult for any strategy toward peace to succeed unless it is backed by strong military power," Roh said at the South's military headquarters near Daejeon, 100 miles south of Seoul.
He said the rival Koreas would eventually discuss how to build military confidence, reduce arms and replace the 1953 Korean War cease-fire with a peace treaty.
Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung told reporters in Seoul that the two Koreas would discuss peace in broad terms, but acknowledged they could not tackle the issue alone. Any real peace treaty would require the participation of the United States and China, which signed the original armistice. North Korea also signed, while the South did not.
State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Monday that the United States generally supports such North-South contacts, and that nuclear matters would likely be discussed. He added, "I don't think that there's anything particular about their conversations, though, that will change substantively the discussions that just occurred in Beijing." He declined to comment further.
The meeting has political undertones for Roh, who leaves office in February. The conservative South Korean opposition has criticized the summit as a ploy aimed at bolstering his sagging popularity, along with that of liberals aligned with him, just two months before the next presidential election.
The North's Kim is also angling to keep the conservatives from power in Seoul, fearful they will reverse the policy of engagement that has brought his impoverished country aid and income despite its continued development of nuclear weapons.
But Roh insists there is never a bad time to improve relations between the Koreas. He is traveling to Kim's stronghold of Pyongyang, even though the North Korean leader had promised in 2000 to come to the South for a return summit.
The first summit won former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung the Nobel Peace Prize for his "sunshine policy," but the achievement was tainted by revelations of some $500 million in secret payments to Pyongyang.
Since then, the two Koreas have reconnected rail and road links across their border and established a joint industrial zone in a North Korean border city. Thousands of Korean families divided between North and South have also met in brief and emotional reunions
news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071001/ap_on_re_as/koreas_summit
The three-day meeting in Pyongyang, starting Tuesday, will mark the first extended appearance of the enigmatic, authoritarian Kim before the world since the two Koreas' only other summit in June 2000. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun is scheduled to deliver a speech Tuesday before departing by road for Pyongyang — stepping out of his armored car for a stroll into the heavily armed Demilitarized Zone, the front line marking the 54-year-old cease-fire between the North and South that halted the Korean War.
The meeting comes at a time of talks over disarmament, with North Korean negotiators set to respond Tuesday to the latest road map. Almost exactly a year ago, the North tested a nuclear bomb, rattling regional stability and leading to a dramatic turnaround in the previously hard-line U.S. policy. Since then, Pyongyang has shut down its sole operating nuclear reactor — which produced material for bombs — and has tentatively agreed to disable its atomic facilities by year-end in a way that they cannot easily be relaunched.
Accompanied by industry leaders, politicians and cultural figures, Roh will spend hours in dialogue with Kim, tour the country and watch the spectacle of thousands of synchronized performers glorifying the North's communist regime. On Monday, amid the echoes of artillery during a ceremony commemorating the South's Armed Forces Day, Roh stressed that peace can only come from a position of strength.
"It would be difficult for any strategy toward peace to succeed unless it is backed by strong military power," Roh said at the South's military headquarters near Daejeon, 100 miles south of Seoul.
He said the rival Koreas would eventually discuss how to build military confidence, reduce arms and replace the 1953 Korean War cease-fire with a peace treaty.
Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung told reporters in Seoul that the two Koreas would discuss peace in broad terms, but acknowledged they could not tackle the issue alone. Any real peace treaty would require the participation of the United States and China, which signed the original armistice. North Korea also signed, while the South did not.
State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Monday that the United States generally supports such North-South contacts, and that nuclear matters would likely be discussed. He added, "I don't think that there's anything particular about their conversations, though, that will change substantively the discussions that just occurred in Beijing." He declined to comment further.
The meeting has political undertones for Roh, who leaves office in February. The conservative South Korean opposition has criticized the summit as a ploy aimed at bolstering his sagging popularity, along with that of liberals aligned with him, just two months before the next presidential election.
The North's Kim is also angling to keep the conservatives from power in Seoul, fearful they will reverse the policy of engagement that has brought his impoverished country aid and income despite its continued development of nuclear weapons.
But Roh insists there is never a bad time to improve relations between the Koreas. He is traveling to Kim's stronghold of Pyongyang, even though the North Korean leader had promised in 2000 to come to the South for a return summit.
The first summit won former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung the Nobel Peace Prize for his "sunshine policy," but the achievement was tainted by revelations of some $500 million in secret payments to Pyongyang.
Since then, the two Koreas have reconnected rail and road links across their border and established a joint industrial zone in a North Korean border city. Thousands of Korean families divided between North and South have also met in brief and emotional reunions
news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071001/ap_on_re_as/koreas_summit