South Korea Moves to Defuse Tensions With the North
By CHOE SANG-HUN
South Korea softened its tone on Thursday amid concerns that North
Korean missile tests were imminent, and its president moved to calm
foreign investors.
- Does the Nuclear Threat From North Korea Affect You? David Guttenfelder/Associated Press
By CHOE SANG-HUN
Published: April 11, 2013
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea appeared to ease its stance on North Korea on Thursday by calling for dialogue to help defuse tensions, as its president moved to calm foreign investors whose confidence the North has tried to shake with increasingly belligerent maneuvers.Do You Live Near the Korean Peninsula?
With the escalating provocation by North Korea, The New York Times is interested in hearing from residents of the Korean peninsula, Japan, China and the region.Multimedia
Related
-
Pentagon Says Nuclear Missile Is in Reach for North Korea (April 12, 2013)
-
Kerry Heads to Asia to Reassure Allies of U.S. Support (April 12, 2013)
-
U.S. and South Korea Put Forces on Alert for Missile Test by North (April 11, 2013)
Ahn Young-Joon/Associated Press
Jacky Chen/Reuters
“We hope the North Korean authorities come out to the dialogue table,” Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl-jae, South Korea’s point man on the North, said in a nationally televised statement that deplored the North’s recent decision to suspend the operation of an industrial park the two Koreas have run together for eight years in the North Korean town of Kaesong. “We strongly urge North Korea not to stoke the crisis on the Korean Peninsula any further.”Mr. Ryoo stopped short of calling his statement an official proposal for dialogue. But it was a considerable softening in tone by President Park Geun-hye's government.Until now, South Korea has categorically rejected any early dialogue with the North, believing that doing so amid a torrent of North Korean threats to attack the South would amount to capitulation and would only embolden the North’s brinkmanship. On Monday, Mr. Ryoo said the South had no intention of talking with North Korea anytime soon because it was unlikely to bring about "concrete results." On Tuesday, Ms. Park vowed to end a "vicious cycle" of South Korea's answering North Korea's hostilities with compromise.“Rather than being an offer for dialogue, this is a public declaration that the problem of the Kaesong industrial complex and the North’s escalating belligerent acts should be resolved through dialogue,” Mr. Ryoo said on Thursday after reading his statement.In London, foreign ministers from the Group of 8 industrialized nations issued a toughly worded statement in which they condemned “in the strongest possible terms” North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons and ballistic-missile technology.The rising tension in the region featured prominently during the meeting, which concluded with a communiqué condemning North Korea’s “current aggressive rhetoric,” appealing to the country to abandon its nuclear weapons program and calling on it to “refrain from further provocative acts.”Its rocket launchings last April and December “seriously undermine regional stability, jeopardize the prospects for lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula and threaten international peace and security,” said the declaration from the foreign ministers of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.At a news conference after the meeting, William Hague, Britain’s foreign secretary, who led the talks, highlighted a pledge by the ministers “to strengthen the current sanctions regime and take further significant measures in the event of a further launch or nuclear test” by the North. He added that the ministers were trying not to stoke tensions or feed the “paranoid rhetoric” from North Korea.On Thursday, North Korea renewed its threat to attack the United States and its allies with missiles."The arrows indicating the merciless retaliatory strikes have already been drawn directing at the U.S. mainland, U.S. military bases in the Pacific and all other bases where the U.S. imperialist aggression forces station,” the Secretariat of the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said in a statement released through the country’s official Korean Central News Agency.“The powerful strike means” have been put in their places and “the coordinates of targets put into the warheads,” said the committee, which usually deals with relations with South Korea. “Just pressing the button will be enough to turn the strongholds of the enemies into the sea of fire.”Hours before Mr. Ryoo spoke, President Park invited a group of foreign investors, including members of the American Chamber of Commerce in South Korea, to a luncheon in her presidential Blue House, assuring them that it was safe to invest in her country.“Some of you may be worried because North Korea has been escalating tensions,” she said. “But South Korea has achieved a dramatic economic growth and democratization in the past 60 years despite the provocations and threats from North Korea.”She said a joint South Korea-American military deterrent against the North and international diplomacy involving regional powers, including China, would help prevent the crisis from getting out of control. She said South Koreans “understand the motives behind the North Korean threats and remain calm” despite repeated crises on the peninsula that so often looked “shocking to the outside world.”Following Mr. Ryoo’s statement, there was confusion within the government over whether it amounted to a change in official stance, according to South Korean media outlets. But they quoted anonymous government officials as saying that the statement was tantamount to a proposal for dialogue.In a front-page article, the mass-circulation JoongAng Ilbo newspaper reported that there was criticism against “the turnaround toward dialogue” because it could send “a wrong signal to the North that the South was capitulating.” But in its editorial, the daily praised a “brave” initiative to defuse tensions and urged North Korea to accept the offer for dialogue.Despite an almost daily drumbeat of belligerent rhetoric from the North, including warnings of a nuclear war on the peninsula, people here in Seoul have shown few signs of outward anxiety. They believe that North Korea will not be reckless or suicidal enough to launch a full-scale war against the South and its American ally, whose mutual defense treaty with South Korea obligates it to fight for the South in a new Korean War.Instead, South Koreans, while expecting their leaders to be firm against North Korean provocations, oppose overreacting to North Korean rhetoric because they believe it would hurt their top priority, economic stability, analysts said.That delicate challenge for Ms. Park was highlighted by signs that investor confidence in South Korea had been rattled by recent events.General Motors said last week that further increases in tensions would prompt it to consider eventually relocating its production out of South Korea. The country’s main stock index slipped to its lowest point since November last week, although it has inched up for a third straight day on Thursday.North Korea on Tuesday tried to add to the tension by warning foreigners in South Korea that they should consider evacuating because the peninsula was moving toward a nuclear war. No foreign embassy in South Korea has followed upon the warning, Cho Tae-young, spokesman for the South Korean Foreign Ministry, said on Thursday.But jitters remained in South Korea amid concerns about possible North Korean missile tests that South Korean officials said could come as early as this week.South Korea will try to shoot down North Korean missiles with its Patriot antimissile battery should they threaten to hit its territory, Kim Min-seok, the spokesman for its Defense Ministry, said on Thursday. Mr. Kim said the North could launch missiles around Monday, the anniversary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the late founder of North Korea and grandfather of the current leader, Kim Jong-un.North Korea appeared to be moving several missiles repeatedly on its east coast in an apparent effort to confuse South Korean and American intelligence, the South Korean national news agency Yonhap quoted anonymous government sources as saying.
-
Do You Live Near the Korean Peninsula?
With the escalating provocation by North Korea, The New York Times is
interested in hearing from residents of the Korean peninsula, Japan,
China and the region.
Multimedia
Timeline of North Korea’s Recent Threats
The North Korean government has hinted at new military provocations in
the coming days, as part of a recent burst of threats outlined here.
COPY http://www.nytimes.com
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário