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http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-koreas-talks-20180329-story.html

North and South Korea agree: Their leaders will hold a summit on April 27 in the DMZ

By Matt Stiles
Mar 29, 2018 | 3:20 PM
| SEOUL


6EXXG6OBHRCPLODMJKTP5EVCVE.jpg

South Korean Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon, left, meets North Korean delegation head Ri Son Gwon on Thursday before their meeting in Panmunjom. (Associated Press)

Negotiators from North and South Korea set a date — April 27 — and a location in the demilitarized zone along their border for a summit between their two leaders, which could foreshadow a meeting between the North's Kim Jong Un and President Trump.

The summit between Kim and the South's president, Moon Jae-in, would be only the third top-level summit between the nations since an armistice ended hostilities in the Korean War in 1953 — and the first held on South Korea soil. The meeting location is the Peace House, a building just over the border on the south in the diplomatic outpost of Panmunjom, presenting the prospect of historic images showing Kim crossing the line.

But it remains unclear precisely how the negotiators, meeting Thursday, set the summit framework for any top-level discussion of the North's nuclear and ballistic missile programs, seen as a key issue in any deal for long-term peace on the peninsula.


In hosting Kim Jong Un, China sent a message: It's still a key player in any North Korean talks
Mar 28, 2018 | 3:35 PM

The negotiations over the date and location of the summit opened with a recent history lesson.



Cho Myoung-gyon, the South's chief negotiator, reminded his counterparts from the North about talks in January over cooperation between the two Koreas at the Winter Olympics — dialogue that sparked the recent torrent of diplomatic activity that holds the promise of resolving decades of tension on the Korean peninsula.

"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step," Cho, the South's unification minister, recalled telling the group then and now. Those talks led to the last-minute participation of North Korean athletes in the Olympics, including as part of a unified Korean women's hockey team.

Thursday's deal represented another step, among many, in the recent thaw between the two countries. But plenty remain.

Experts watching the developments are mindful of how past agreements or potential diplomatic breakthroughs fell short.

Two key agreements in recent decades between Washington and Pyongyang over nuclear development eventually collapsed, and that work continued despite top-level talks between the North and South in 2000 and 2007 under previous leaders.

Kim Byoung-joo, who teaches foreign studies at Hankuk University in Seoul, said the United States and South Korea would seek to avoid the failings of previous agreements.

"This is a first step, but it's not the same first step of the past, since it's based on past experiences and lessons," he said in reference to Cho's opening remarks. "It's a different kind of first step."

The parties, who met on the North Korean side of the diplomatic complex to discuss the summit, plan to convene again early next month to discuss protocol, security and media coverage of the event, according to a joint statement.

South Korean officials said after the meeting that the summit would in principle focus on the North's nuclear program, which sparked international condemnation last year over numerous ballistic missile tests and the underground detonation of a hydrogen bomb.

The North has boasted that it is now capable of striking the U.S. mainland with a nuclear-armed missile.

The parties also agreed that a peace agreement between the North and South, which are still technically at war, remained a goal.

"North and South agreed on the historical significance of the summit in denuclearization and settlement of peace on the Korean peninsula, and the improvement of inter-Korean relationship," Cho said after the negotiations.

Ri Son Gwon, Cho's counterpart on inter-Korean issues from the North, said "a number of working-level issues" remain before the summit next month.

"But if we acknowledge the historical significance and importance of the upcoming summit and make sincere efforts, we will be able to solve all problems promptly and smoothly," said Ri, who helped negotiate the Olympics deal and traveled to the South during the Games.

Heather Nauert, the spokeswoman for the U.S. State Department, welcomed the announcement of the meeting. The summit "moves us closer to the point where the United States can sit down with North Korea and have a meeting.

"We're realistic about that overall. The State Department is planning for that meeting. We're going ahead in full faith and good faith."

She said the Trump administration believes "overall that the pressure campaign is working.... We're proud of that pressure campaign, and so many countries joining the United States in recognizing [these] destabilizing elements within North Korea and the North Korean regime, in terms of its ballistic missile and nuclear testing."

As one result of the North Korea talks, Trump said he may put a hold on a new trade deal with South Korea that would lift U.S. steel tariffs in exchange for greater access to the South Korean auto market.

"I may hold it up until after a deal is made with North Korea," Trump said during a speech in Ohio that was ostensibly about roads and bridges. "Because it's a very strong card and I want to make sure everyone is treated fairly and we're moving along very nicely with North Korea."

The remarks surprised and confused many, because they appeared to draw a link between the trade deal with South Korea and the joint effort by the U.S. and South Korea to enter into talks with North Korea.

Trump agreed in early March to meet Kim, the totalitarian state's third-generation leader, in May. The details for those potential talks remain unclear.

The agreement Thursday on the North-South summit details was an incremental step in a rapid diplomatic process that began with the election of Moon, who came to power in May promising a more dialogue-focused plan in dealing with the North after a decade of hard-line policies by previous South Korean presidents.

Last summer, Moon first floated the idea of a combined Korean hockey team at the Winter Olympics, held in February in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

Koreas' unified women's hockey team exposed a key difference between South and North — their language »

It wasn't until Kim's own conciliatory speech on New Year's Day that the idea gained traction.

After negotiations, the two nations fielded the joint team — the first truly Korean team in Olympics history — but also marched together during the opening ceremony under a neutral unification flag. The North sent numerous athletes and hundreds of others for cheerleading and cultural exchanges.

That then led to more dialogue and then the upcoming inter-Korean summit — and perhaps one with Trump, which would be a first for a sitting United States president and a North Korean leader.

The negotiations in Panmunjom came a day after revelations about the surprise trip Kim took to Beijing this week to meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

The two countries, historically allies, have had a tense relationship in recent years amid the North's nuclear provocations and international pressure on China to add teeth to economic sanctions.

It's those sanctions that might have prompted Pyongyang to talk — or the fact that the nation feels comfortable that its nuclear development allows its leader to negotiate on the world stage in stronger position, said Kim Byoung-joo, the Hankuk University professor.

"Either way," he said, "they have made a decision."

ALSO

A velvet fist in an iron glove? China talks tough about Taiwan, but shows signs of a softer policy

Summits would expose North Korea's Kim Jong Un to scrutiny he's never experienced

With Xi in office for the long haul, China touts its stability — 'the opposite of Washington, D.C.'

Stiles is a special correspondent.

UPDATES:

3:24 p.m.: This article has been updated with Trump administration reaction.

9 a.m, March 29.: This article was updated throughout with staff reporting, including additional details of the summit.

11:45 p.m, March 28.: This article was updated with additional details about the planned meeting, as well as context.

This article was originally published at Wednesday, March 28, at 11:15 p.m.
 
Kim Jong Nuke is really playing the Ang Mohs all like monkeys.

Ang Moh will get nuked until completely Gabra!
 
It will be no different compared to the past. NK will just cause problems later. The same song and dance for the past 50 years.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-pop-stars-perform-in-pyongyang-idUSKCN1H81A5

North Korea's Kim Jong Un, wife, watch South Korean K-pop stars perform in Pyongyang
Christine Kim, Heekyong Yang
4 Min Read

  • r
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, were among the hundreds in Pyongyang on Sunday watching South Korean K-pop singers perform in the North for the first time in more than a decade as tensions between the two countries thaw.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meets South Korean K-pop singers in this photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang April 2, 2018. KCNA/via Reuters
It was the first time a North Korean leader had attended a South Korean performance in the capital. Kim was seen clapping in tune to some of the songs and later took photographs with the performers after the show.

“Our dear leader comrade said his heart swelled and he was moved by the sight of his people deepen their understanding of South Korean popular culture and cheer with sincerity,” said the North’s state media.

The North Korean audience clapped, cheered, sang along to some of the songs and later presented the South Korean performers with flower bouquets.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his wife Ri Sol Ju watch South Korean K-pop singers perform in a concert under the title "Spring is Coming" at the Pyongyang Taekwondo Hall in North Korea in this photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang April 2, 2018. KCNA/via Reuters
“(Kim Jong Un) showed much interest during the show and asked questions about the songs and lyrics,” Culture Minister Do Jong-whan told reporters after the show.

Sunday’s concert was held under the title “Spring is Coming” at the East Pyongyang Grand Theater, performed by an elite lineup of South Korean artists including veteran vocalists Cho Yong-pil, Lee Sun-hee, rock star Yoon Do-hyun, singer Baek Ji-young as well as K-pop girl band Red Velvet.

Like the concert title, the performance had brought a “spring of peace” to the two Koreas, Kim Jong Un was also cited as saying by the North’s central news agency, and expressed wishes for a “prosperous autumn”.

The North Korean leader’s face was slightly flushed in a group photograph with the performers distributed by North Korean state media, while in another, he was seen directly addressing members of Red Velvet, which commands more than 4.6 million followers on Instagram.

THAW
Sunday’s two-hour concert in Pyongyang, along with a separate taekwondo performance earlier in the day, came as South Korea’s engagement with North Korea has continued to grow since Kim expressed his willingness for more contact between the two countries.

Slideshow (5 Images)
Athletes from North and South Korea marched under a unified peninsula flag at the opening ceremony at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in February and the significant thaw in the inter-Korean relations has led them to set a date for their first summit in more than a decade on April 27.

The two Koreas are technically still at war after the 1950-1953 conflict ended with a ceasefire rather than a peace agreement.

The South Korean delegation included artists, concert staff, taekwondo demonstrators, reporters and government officials. They traveled to Pyongyang on Saturday in a reciprocal cultural visit after North Korea sent performers to the South in February, the South’s Culture Ministry said.

North Korea will take part in next two Olympics: IOC
In addition to the concert, a team of South Korean taekwondo demonstrators performed on Sunday at the Pyongyang Taekwondo Hall, drawing more than 2,300 North Koreans, including Choe Hwi, chairman of the National Sports Guidance Committee.

Seohyun, a female vocalist and actress currently with South Korean girl group Girls’ Generation, sang a North Korean pop song called “Blue Willow Tree”. She had performed with the North’s Samjiyon Orchestra in Seoul in February.

Cho Yong-pil, a 68-year-old singer, sang a string of hits including “The Cafe in the Winter”, “Short Hair” and “Let’s Go on a Trip”. Cho held a solo concert in Pyongyang in 2005 - the last concert by a South Korean artist in the North before Sunday’s performance.

The same South Korean singers will hold a joint concert with North Korean performers on Tuesday at the Ryukyung Chung Ju Yung Gymnasium, a joint project between the North and South named after Hyundai Group [HYGR.UL] billionaire founder Chung Ju-yung who had long advocated inter-Korean cultural and economic exchange.

Kim Jong Un had been planning to attend the Tuesday performance but decided to watch Sunday’s show due to “political schedules”, KCNA and South Korean officials there said.

Reporting by Heekyong Yang and Christine Kim; Editing by Louise Heavens and Peter Cooney

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...dea-was-kim-jong-uns-china-trip-north-says-it

Kim Jong-un masterminded China visit even though the invitation came from Xi Jinping, North Korea says
Observers said China was just following protocol by sending an invitation to Kim after North Korea proposed the trip, and it showed China was still of use to Pyongyang

PUBLISHED : Friday, 30 March, 2018, 10:48pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 31 March, 2018, 1:56am
Comments: 35

981984aa-3415-11e8-9019-a420e6317de0_1280x720_015629.jpg

Teddy Ng Jeong Ho Lee
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Diplomacy & Defence
Don’t fall for Kim’s trap, warns ex-South Korea foreign minister
30 Mar 2018
Kim Jong-un’s surprise visit to China this week was initiated by the reclusive North Korean leader, official media in Pyongyang has reported, contradicting suggestions that Beijing invited Kim to boost its leverage over the Korean peninsula.

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Chinese state media reported that Kim visited China from Sunday to Wednesday at the invitation of President Xi Jinping.

But that invitation was extended after Pyongyang suggested the visit to Xi and the Chinese Communist Party leadership, the Korean Central News Agency (KNCA) said.

All aboard the Kim Jong-un Express to China: a rare glimpse inside the armoured train

During a banquet at the Great Hall of the People, Kim said he was “deeply moved by the sincerity and deep consideration shown by Xi Jinping and leading officials of the Chinese party and state, so that the successful visit could be made in a short period after gladly accepting the proposal”, according to a KCNA report.

662f907e-3415-11e8-9019-a420e6317de0_972x_015629.jpg


Observers said China was just following protocol by sending an invitation to Kim after North Korea proposed the trip, and it showed China was still of use to Pyongyang.

The visit came as tensions have eased over the Korean peninsula, and following the announcement that Kim will hold direct talks with South Korean President Moon Jae-in next month, and US President Donald Trump in May.

Those meetings had raised questions about whether Beijing’s influence over its neighbour was diminishing, as relations between China and North Korea have soured since Kim came to power in 2011, with Pyongyang openly criticising China for imposing sanctions against the regime.

Kim Jong-un wife’s fashion sense a hit with China’s public

But both sides were upbeat about their bilateral relations following Kim’s visit, saying the two leaders had agreed to meet more often.

Kim also received a warm welcome in China, with senior party officials meeting him on the Chinese side of the border in Dandong, Liaoning province aboard his train.

21121228-3415-11e8-9019-a420e6317de0_972x_015629.jpg


On Friday, Xi’s special envoy, Yang Jiechi, briefed South Korean President Moon Jae-in on the visit during a meeting in Seoul. Yang said all parties must seize the opportunity to advance talks between the leaders of the two Koreas, and between Pyongyang and Washington.

“Moon and Yang talked deeply about the possible methods to achieve successful inter-Korean and Trump-Kim summits,” a spokesman for South Korea’s presidential office said after the talks.

“China has decided to actively cooperate for the denuclearisation and settlement of peace in the Korean peninsula.”

A Beijing-based military source who closely follows the North Korean nuclear issue said it was understood that Pyongyang proposed Kim’s visit to Beijing, even though China’s state news agency Xinhua said it was Xi who initiated the trip.

“Pyongyang will try to grab as many advantages as possible before Kim’s meetings with President Moon Jae-in and President Donald Trump, and China is really the best card up its sleeve,” said the military source, who requested anonymity.

“Kim’s meeting with Xi will likely help him at the negotiating table when he’s dealing with Moon and Trump, because Xi would have reminded him about China’s bottom line and stance on the nuclear issue.”

aff2b860-341c-11e8-9019-a420e6317de0_972x_015629.jpg


Former South Korean foreign minister Yun Byung-se said Kim needed advice from Xi on how to deal with Trump – who has repeatedly threatened to take military action against Pyongyang – because Kim lacks experience in summit diplomacy.

Zhou Chenming, a Beijing-based military expert, said the visit showed that Kim still saw China as an ally.

How a trip to Seoul by special envoy Yang Jiechi shows party’s diplomatic ambitions

“Now that Kim believes China can be of help, he comes,” Zhou said. “North Korea wanted to get someone in its corner at a time when it is under heavy international criticism.”

For its part, Zhou said China accepted Pyongyang’s proposal because Beijing wants to restart the suspended six-party talks, which it says are useful for resolving the nuclear issue but other nations such as the US are sceptical about.


“China wants to deliver a message that North Korea is still a country that you can talk to provided that there is a suitable environment to do so,” Zhou said.

But he added that China did not have huge sway over North Korea and the visit had been motivated by Pyongyang’s own interests.

“China may try to change North Korea’s approach, but it won’t be able to tell Pyongyang what to do,” he said.

Additional reporting by Minnie Chan


This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: north says kim, not Beijing, pushed for secret talks



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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...re-concert-by-south-korean-pop-stars-10093864

Kim Jong Un attends rare concert by South Korean pop stars
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) and South Korea's Culture, Sports and Tourism Minister Do Jong-whan clapping during a rare concert by South Korean musicians. (Photo: KOREA POOL / AFP)
01 Apr 2018 10:45PM (Updated: 02 Apr 2018 07:20AM)
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PYONGYANG: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Sunday (Apr 1) attended the first concert in Pyongyang for over a decade by South Korean entertainers, including a K-pop girlband, the latest gesture of reconciliation before a rare inter-Korean summit.

The visit, described by many as a cultural charm-offensive by the South, came as a diplomatic thaw quickens on the peninsula after months of tensions.

The 120-member group - 11 musical acts as well as dancers, technicians and martial artists - gave one concert on Sunday with another set for Tuesday.

South Korean musicians take a rehearsal for a rare concert at the 1,500-seat East Pyongyang Grand Theatre in Pyongyang. (KOREA POOL/AFP)

Kim and his wife, a former singer herself, came to watch Sunday's show, making him the first leader of the North to attend a concert by South Korean performers.

Kim shook hands and took photos with the stars backstage, saying inter-Korean cultural events should be held more often and suggesting another event in the South Korean capital this autumn, pool reports said.

The young couple were seen clapping their hands during the two-hour event - also attended by Kim's powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong, and ceremonial head of state Kim Yong Nam.

"Please tell (South Korean) President Moon Jae-in how great an event like this is ... I am grateful for a gift like this (concert) to the people of Pyongyang," Kim told visiting Seoul officials.

Kim also showed "great interest in the songs and lyrics (of South Korean singers) during the concert," Do Jong-hwan, Seoul's culture chief and the head of the delegation, told reporters.

The South's taekwondo athletes also staged a performance before an audience of 2,300 in Pyongyang on Sunday ahead of a joint display of the Korean martial art with the North's practitioners on Monday.

The ongoing rapprochement was triggered by the South's Winter Olympics, to which the North's leader Kim Jong Un sent athletes, cheerleaders and his sister as an envoy.

A North Korean art troupe staged two performances in the South in February to celebrate the Games.

Kim followed up by agreeing to a summit with Moon, and offering a face-to-face meet with US President Donald Trump. Kim also met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week during his first overseas trip.

The inter-Korean summit, the third after meetings in 2000 and 2007, will be held on Apr 27. No date has been set for the US-North Korean summit although it is expected before the end of May.

In another sign of eased tensions, an annual US-South Korean military exercise which got under way in the South on Sunday will last for just one month compared to some two months normally.

This year's drills feature fewer strategic weapons such as nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, Seoul's military has said. Such deployments during past drills has frequently drawn an angry response from Pyongyang.

'LET'S DO OUR BEST'

Sunday's concert to a packed audience at the elaborately decorated 1,500-seat East Pyongyang Grand Theatre ended with a standing ovation after a finale in which all the stars appeared on stage to sing a song about unification.

One of the most closely watched acts was Red Velvet, part of the South's hugely popular K-pop phenomenon that has taken audiences in Asia and beyond by storm in recent decades.

Members of K-pop girlband 'Red Velvet' pose for a photo for a rare concert at the 1,500-seat East Pyongyang Grand Theatre in Pyongyang. (KOREA POOL/AFP)

Before the concert, even the leader Kim joked: "There was so much interest in whether I'd come to see Red Velvet or not."

The five-member girlband - known for its signature K-pop mix of upbeat electronic music, stylish fashion and high-voltage choreography - performed two of their hits, "Bad Boy" and "Red Flavour".

"The North's audience applauded to our performance much louder than we expected and even sang along to our songs ... it was a big relief," band member Yeri told reporters.

"I told myself, 'let's do our best even if there's no response (from the audience) ... but they showed so much reaction," added a member called Wendy.

Another member, Seulgi, appeared red-eyed as she bid farewell to the audience at the end of the concert, apparently overcome with emotion.

'MAZE OF LOVE'

Despite the North's isolation and strict curbs on unauthorised foreign culture, enforced with prison terms, K-pop and Seoul's TV shows have become increasingly popular there thanks to flash drives smuggled across the border with China.

The emcee of Sunday's concert was a popular member of K-pop girlband Girls' Generation, Seohyun, who had performed with the visiting Pyongyang singers during their Seoul concert in February.

Legendary South Korean singer Cho Yong-pil, who held a solo sell-out concert in Pyongyang in 2005, was another star of the show.

Kim's late father and longtime ruler, Kim Jong Il, was known to be a fan of the 68-year-old Cho.

Another famous singer, Choi Jin-hee, also performed for the fourth time in the North and sang "Maze of Love" - a hit in both Koreas and another of the late Kim's favourites.

But not all onlookers were receptive to the K-pop offensive.

During the taekwondo event, a previously-enraptured audience turned stone-faced during a performance combining K-pop dance and Taekwondo routines to a hit song by the ultra-popular boyband BTS.

The stiffened crowd refused to respond to the athletes who asked them to clap their hands to "Fire" - an intense electro-dance score peppered with rapid-fire rap delivered in both Korean and English.

Source: AFP/de
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