ID :
85095
Mon, 10/19/2009 - 14:26
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/85095
The shortlink copeid
Seoul says 'misunderstanding' to blame for U.S. comment on N. Korea summit
(LEAD) proposal
(ATTN: ADDS quotes by Washington official on inter-Korean summit, CHANGES dateline
to add Washington)
By Byun Duk-kun
SEOUL/WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (Yonhap) -- South Korea on Sunday dismissed a U.S.
official's comment that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has invited South Korean
President Lee Myung-bak to a summit in Pyongyang, saying there was an apparent
"misunderstanding."
In a briefing to reporters on U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates' trip to Asia,
a Pentagon official said the North Korean leader was seeking a summit with his
South Korean counterpart.
"Now suddenly we reached charm face with North Korea, with Kim Jong-il inviting
Lee Myung-bak of the Republic of Korea to visit Pyongyang, with (Premier) Wen
Jiabao from China going to visit Pyongyang," the official said in the background
briefing, under customary condition of anonymity.
An official at Seoul's presidential office Cheong Wa Dae said there appears to
have been a misunderstanding on the U.S. part of what Seoul has briefed
Washington regarding Lee's recent meeting with Premier Wen.
In a trilateral summit that also involved Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama,
Wen said the North was hoping to improve its ties with South Korea and Japan.
Wen made a high-profile trip to Pyongyang earlier this month for a meeting with
the North Korean leader, who also told Wen that his country may rejoin
international dialogue on ending its nuclear ambitions depending on the outcome
of bilateral talks with the U.S.
The Cheong Wa Dae official said that at the summit between Lee and Wen, an
inter-Korean summit was only mentioned in the context that it could be possible
if the South-North relationship improves.
"We briefed the U.S. administration on the outcome of the summit (with China),
and I think there must have been some kind of misunderstanding on the U.S. side,"
the official in Seoul told reporters.
Pentagon spokesman Georf Morrell, addressing the controversy, said, "The
government of President Lee Myung-bak is on record as expressing its longstanding
willingness in principle to hold talks with North Korea, including at the level
of the two leaders, in order to promote denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula."
"Any decision regarding possible talks between South and North Korea, however,
would be made by the Republic of Korea," he said.
Lee Dong-kwan, top secretary to the South Korean president on public relations,
said what was important was not whether there had been in an invitation from the
North Korean leader, but whether such a meeting will lead to any actual progress.
"The president has repeatedly stressed that he will welcome a meeting with North
Korean leader Kim at any time, but that such a meeting will be meaningless unless
they are both sincerely willing to make progress," he said.
bdk@yna.co.kr
(END)
(ATTN: ADDS quotes by Washington official on inter-Korean summit, CHANGES dateline
to add Washington)
By Byun Duk-kun
SEOUL/WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (Yonhap) -- South Korea on Sunday dismissed a U.S.
official's comment that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has invited South Korean
President Lee Myung-bak to a summit in Pyongyang, saying there was an apparent
"misunderstanding."
In a briefing to reporters on U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates' trip to Asia,
a Pentagon official said the North Korean leader was seeking a summit with his
South Korean counterpart.
"Now suddenly we reached charm face with North Korea, with Kim Jong-il inviting
Lee Myung-bak of the Republic of Korea to visit Pyongyang, with (Premier) Wen
Jiabao from China going to visit Pyongyang," the official said in the background
briefing, under customary condition of anonymity.
An official at Seoul's presidential office Cheong Wa Dae said there appears to
have been a misunderstanding on the U.S. part of what Seoul has briefed
Washington regarding Lee's recent meeting with Premier Wen.
In a trilateral summit that also involved Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama,
Wen said the North was hoping to improve its ties with South Korea and Japan.
Wen made a high-profile trip to Pyongyang earlier this month for a meeting with
the North Korean leader, who also told Wen that his country may rejoin
international dialogue on ending its nuclear ambitions depending on the outcome
of bilateral talks with the U.S.
The Cheong Wa Dae official said that at the summit between Lee and Wen, an
inter-Korean summit was only mentioned in the context that it could be possible
if the South-North relationship improves.
"We briefed the U.S. administration on the outcome of the summit (with China),
and I think there must have been some kind of misunderstanding on the U.S. side,"
the official in Seoul told reporters.
Pentagon spokesman Georf Morrell, addressing the controversy, said, "The
government of President Lee Myung-bak is on record as expressing its longstanding
willingness in principle to hold talks with North Korea, including at the level
of the two leaders, in order to promote denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula."
"Any decision regarding possible talks between South and North Korea, however,
would be made by the Republic of Korea," he said.
Lee Dong-kwan, top secretary to the South Korean president on public relations,
said what was important was not whether there had been in an invitation from the
North Korean leader, but whether such a meeting will lead to any actual progress.
"The president has repeatedly stressed that he will welcome a meeting with North
Korean leader Kim at any time, but that such a meeting will be meaningless unless
they are both sincerely willing to make progress," he said.
bdk@yna.co.kr
(END)