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North Korea nuclear programme: Seoul hopes Trump can learn the art of the ‘small deal’

  • South’s President Moon Jae-in is pulling out the stops to revive talks on denuclearisation
  • But Washington is sceptical of half-measures and Pyongyang appears intransigent

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A rocket launch by North Korea. Photo: AP
South Korea’s renewed push to revive moribund denuclearisation talks between North Korea and the United States faces hurdles including intransigence in Pyongyang and scepticism of half-measures in Washington, analysts say, amid reports Seoul hopes to salvage a “small deal” between the sides.
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US Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun was on Thursday due to wrap up a three-day visit to Seoul during which he spoke with South Korean officials about ways to rekindle long-stalled efforts to convince the North to relinquish its nuclear weapons programmes. The diplomat’s flurry of engagements included talks with Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha, First Vice-Foreign Minister Cho Sei-young and top nuclear envoy Lee Do-hoon.
The visit came after South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who has made rapprochement with the North a priority, last week called on US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to hold a third summit before the US presidential election to resolve the nuclear stand-off.

The North, which last month blew up an inter-Korean liaison office on its side of the border in a major blow to Moon’s engagement efforts, has in recent days twice ruled out returning to talks with the US. The sides haven’t held dialogue since the breakdown of working level talks in Sweden in October.

“The Moon administration wants to make a breakthrough before the November election [in the US],” said Choi Kang, vice-president of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul, describing the South as “desperate” for any deal that would help it repair relations with the North. “It is their hope. But I am sceptical about the possibility of it.”

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Photo: AP
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Photo: AP
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Biegun’s trip came after South Korea’s Donga newspaper reported on Monday that Seoul’s recently reshuffled national security team was pushing for Washington and Pyongyang to reach an agreement on partial denuclearisation that would leave some nuclear sites intact. The team led by Suh Hoon, the new director of the presidential Blue House’s National Security Office, has set its sights on a deal under which the US would relax sanctions on Pyongyang in exchange for the dismantling of the North’s Yongbyon nuclear facility and its intercontinental ballistic missiles, according to the newspaper. Under the “small deal plus” proposal, sanctions would snap back into place in the event of the agreement being violated, the report said, citing an anonymous diplomatic source.

Although the North’s nuclear and missile programmes remain shrouded in mystery, the regime has numerous unacknowledged nuclear facilities, according to researchers at the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies and other analysts. Trump reportedly walked out of his second summit with Kim in Hanoi in February 2019 after the North Korean leader rejected complete denuclearisation in exchange for normalisation of economic relations.
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