iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

North Korea Calls For End Of Hostile Relations With U.S.

KWANG-TAE KIM   01/ 2/10 01:44 AM ET   AP

North Korea

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea called for an end of hostile relations with the United States in a New Year's message and said it was committed to making the Korean peninsula nuclear-free through negotiations.

At the same time, a Tokyo-based pro-North Korean newspaper indicated that the leaders of North and South Korea could hold a summit this year, citing Pyongyang's strong commitment to improve relations with Seoul.

Communist North Korea has long demanded that Washington end hostility toward its government, and said it developed nuclear weapons to deter a U.S. attack. Washington has repeatedly said it has no intention of invading the country.

The New Year statement brightened prospects for North Korea to rejoin stalled international talks on ending its nuclear weapons programs in exchange for aid and other concessions. Washington has sought to coax it to return to the talks, which also include South Korea, China, Russia and Japan.

The North has often said it wants to replace a cease-fire that ended the 1950-53 Korean War with a peace treaty and forge diplomatic relations with the U.S. as a way to win security guarantees – demands Washington says should be linked to North Korea's verifiable denuclearization.

"The fundamental task for ensuring peace and stability on the Korean peninsula and in the rest of Asia is to put an end to the hostile relationship" between North Korea and the U.S., the North said Friday in the New Year statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency, state radio and television.

North Korea's traditional New Year's Day statements are examined for clues to its policies. This year's statement said it is committed to establishing "a lasting peace system on the Korean peninsula and make it nuclear-free through dialogue and negotiations."

The U.S. and North Korea agreed on the need to resume the nuclear negotiations during a trip by President Barack Obama's special envoy to Pyongyang in December, but North Korea did not make a firm commitment on when it would rejoin the talks.

Last year, North Korea quit the disarmament talks and conducted a nuclear test, drawing widespread condemnation and tighter U.N. sanctions.

Cheong Seong-chang, a senior analyst at the private Sejong Institute security think tank, said North Korea is likely to maintain its conciliatory approach toward the U.S.

"The North extended an olive branch to the U.S.," Cheong said, adding that he expects the two sides will agree to set up a liaison office as a symbolic move to end their hostilities.

But Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Kookmin University in Seoul, said despite North Korea's willingness to talk with the U.S., it is unlikely to surrender its nuclear program or make any other important concessions.

The North Korean statement said it remains committed to improving relations with South Korea, and urged the South to refrain from actions that might aggravate tensions.

"Unshakable is our stand that we will improve the north-south relations," said the statement.

The Tokyo-based Choson Sinbo newspaper, considered a mouthpiece for North Korea's government, suggested in a report late Friday the possibility of an inter-Korean summit this year.

The two Koreas held their first summit in 2000 between then-President Kim Dae-jung and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. The second summit was held in 2007 between then-President Roh Moo-hyun and Kim.

The two sides held a secret meeting in October in Singapore and two follow-up meetings in November at a North Korean border town to discuss setting up a summit between South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and Kim, Yonhap news agency said last month, citing unidentified sources.

North Korea has tried to reach out to Seoul and Washington since last summer in an about-face that analysts and officials say shows the North feels the pain of U.N. sanctions.

In South Korea on Friday, about 70 conservative activists tied tens of thousands of leaflets condemning Kim Jong Il to balloons and launched them across the border into the North. Some protesters also burned large North Korean flags with Kim's picture printed on them.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea called for an end of hostile relations with the United States in a New Year's message and said it was committed to making the Korean peninsula nuclear-free throu...
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea called for an end of hostile relations with the United States in a New Year's message and said it was committed to making the Korean peninsula nuclear-free throu...
Filed by Adam J. Rose  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 117
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ira7
11:48 AM on 01/04/2010
Forget it:

A boat from one country is going to catch a herring 5 feet into the other's waters, and it''ll be talk of war all over again.
08:01 AM on 01/04/2010
Just more propaganda to try and blackmail the US into giving aid.
A better solution would to issue an international arrest warrant for Kim JongIl and position more thermonuclear devices nearby while at the same time demanding that the North Korean government be disolved.
10:00 PM on 03/08/2010
No one has the right to tell people how to run their country or their lives.
11:12 PM on 01/03/2010
I wonder where they get those midget bodyguards?
10:00 PM on 03/08/2010
That's their native. That's rude.
05:50 PM on 01/03/2010
It's extending an olive branch, because its people are starving. It needs food.
photo
SeattlePepe
Lean right but sometimes look left
01:58 PM on 01/03/2010
And of course Obama and the democrats will fully believe this; no asking for anything but words. The beauty of hope!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phreejazz
05:15 PM on 01/03/2010
Bull. Obama actually understands diplomacy and has the skills of basic political literacy. Believe it or not, words have a role in politics and international diplomacy even when they're part of playing a game that everyone *knows* is a game. Bush et al. could do nothing but threaten partially because that was the outer limit of their skill set.
05:53 PM on 01/03/2010
I would have thought it should perfectly clear by now that Obama is no naive dreamer.
01:53 PM on 01/03/2010
The last of the story said that South Korean people sent leaflets across the border condemning Kim ...
I didn't know they had SK-teabaggers in that part of the world ....

Looks like the sanctions have worked on NK.... Now if they would work on Iran too ... then we could really be on our way to peace and open trade with Iran as well as SK & NK both.....

We can only hope for the best .... But Achmedwhoever does not care if the people suffer and will not change his ways .... He needs to go ..... The people of all nations should be free to live, speak, and practice the religion of their choice.

I hope all this can come about before Kim di es so it will be put into action before leaders change hands again .../
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phreejazz
05:12 PM on 01/03/2010
"But Achmedwhoever does not care if the people suffer and will not change his ways"

And Kim does? He's literally starving the people of North Korea to death.
02:49 AM on 01/03/2010
Sounds like they're coming to grips with the unacknowledged death of Kim Jung Il.
02:40 AM on 01/03/2010
Loved the photo of Kim & company; anticipating the forthcoming music video.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phreejazz
02:53 AM on 01/03/2010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-RGT0JQ2FQ&feature=related

Looking forward to the added background dancers pictured here though, for sure
09:45 PM on 01/02/2010
Give them a week and they will be calling us every name under he sun again.
photo
SeattlePepe
Lean right but sometimes look left
02:04 PM on 01/03/2010
You got it, dux. In the mean time, folks on here want us to increase our power by meditating, getting rid of our nukes and apologizing. God help us if we become so naive in hope (we've already seen change isn't anying more than a campaign tagline).
10:05 PM on 03/08/2010
Because of comments like this.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
irishgramm
09:24 PM on 01/02/2010
We can only hope and pray the North Koreans are being truthful! One of the few countrys in the world where starvation and deprivation have caused an acutal shrinkage in height of their population by more than 3 inches, as compared to South Korea and the rest of the industrialized and civilized world where height increases with good nutrition and health. Guess Kim and the rest decided you can't rule a country with an iron hand if you have no people to rule!!!
08:34 PM on 01/02/2010
North Korea talking detente?
We can't have that.
We've got to have a nuclear threat in Asia to reference every three or four months.

Let's just hope the U.S. rebuffs them so that we can go back to business as usual.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phreejazz
09:06 PM on 01/02/2010
It's Korea's opening play in the now-agreed upon bi-lateral talks. Obama anouncing such basically called Kim's bluff. Is it sincere? Not damn likely. I happen to agree w/you on what role N.K plays in our own political discourse, and why we haven't solved the problem yet, but this is a game play. Nothing more.
07:14 PM on 01/02/2010
One of the condidtions for this New Year's resolution is:
1)if there is a slight disagreement in the discussons, no hostage taking.
04:54 PM on 01/02/2010
I would like to ignore the fact that they're so br/oke they need all the friends they can get and instead use this positive gesture as a stepping stone towards better relations with all the nations of the world.

Peace and love to all.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
08:40 PM on 01/02/2010
A-men!
10:03 PM on 03/08/2010
Thatnk you.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ukaisofu
04:22 PM on 01/02/2010
North Korea is Century 21 version of East Germany - Reunification will work - give it a chance!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
b-dob
04:35 PM on 01/02/2010
Where's Ronald Reagan when you need him?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phreejazz
04:53 PM on 01/02/2010
Let's see... Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, failed banks set loose by the deregulation orgy that Reagan started, etc. etc. etc. all Reagan legacies. Looks to me like Reagan is exactly where he should be when we 'need' him: far far away.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
08:41 PM on 01/02/2010
In a galaxy far, far away.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Azsin
i need a wife
03:34 PM on 01/02/2010
think people should relize that kim is old
and he will be dead sooner than later

his succesor might not be as scary as him
north korea could radicaly destabilize

which would not be a good thing

peace talks now would be good for us our asain friends and most importantly the Koreans