
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) -South Korean President Lee Jae Myung vowed on Tuesday to end a "vicious cycle of unnecessary military tensions" with North Korea, with the aim of achieving peaceful coexistence and shared growth.
In his first speech to the United Nations General Assembly, Lee emphasized his vision of a "phased solution" to the North Korean nuclear issue, "based on a cool-headed perception that denuclearization cannot be achieved in the short term."
On Sunday, the leader of nuclear-armed North Korea, Kim Jong Un, rejected any phased plan, saying recent overtures from Washington and Seoul for dialogue were disingenuous because their fundamental intent to weaken Pyongyang remained unchanged.
Kim said there was no reason to avoid talks with the U.S. if Washington stopped insisting he give up his nuclear weapons, but he would never abandon the nuclear arsenal to end U.S.-led sanctions.
Lee said Seoul would "consistently seek a path to reduce military tensions and restore inter-Korean trust" and pointed to recent actions like halting propaganda leaflets and loudspeaker broadcasts to North Korea.
"By gradually expanding inter-Korean exchanges in cooperation, we will pave the way for sustainable peace," he said.
On Sunday, the North Korean leader said he would never engage in dialogue with Seoul. However, Kim said he had "fond memories" of U.S. President Donald Trump, with whom he held several summits in the U.S. leader's first term, engagement that collapsed over U.S. denuclearization demands.
Trump said last month he wanted to meet Kim this year, but in a wide-ranging 55-minute speech to the U.N. on Tuesday, the U.S. leader made no mention of North Korea.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
South Korea, US see progress on military control transfer as
Pyongyang tensions simmer
American and South Korean flags at Yongin South Korea
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea's defence ministry and its U.S. counterpart shared the view that there had been significant progress in meeting conditions for a transfer of wartime operational control, a ministry official said on Wednesday.
Currently, the U.S. would command allied troops in the event of war on the Korean peninsula, but South Korea has been seeking to gain "operational control".
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung vowed on Tuesdayto end a "vicious cycle of unnecessary military tensions" with North Korea, with the aim of achieving peaceful coexistence and shared growth.
After a senior-level meeting in Seoul, the South Korean defence ministry said in a statement that the two sides had assessed overall military cooperation to develop the alliance into a reciprocal, future-oriented, and modernised one.
They also agreed to cooperate on follow-up measures to what had been discussed during the first summit in August between the leaders of the two countries, the ministry said, without elaborating.
The statement did not mention the issue of operational control, but a South Korean official confirmed an earlier report by the Yonhap news agency that the two sides shared the view at the meeting.
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said earlier he agreed with U.S. President Donald Trump during the summit to expand cooperation in high-tech defence sectors.
(Reporting by Jihoon Lee and Ju-min Park, Editing by William Maclean and Kim Coghill)