Seoul asks Trump to play ‘peacemaker’


PRESIDENT Lee Jae-myung has asked President Donald Trump to become “a peacemaker” and use his ­leadership to get North Korea to talks to reduce military tensions on the Korean Peninsula, the South’s top diplomat said.

Trump “welcomed” the request from President Lee and “he expressed his willingness to be engaged with North Korea again,” Foreign Minister Cho Hyun said Friday. There was no immediate word from the White House.

Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un met three times as North Korea was building a nuclear weapons stockpile, which Kim views as key to the country’s security and his continued rule of the northeast Asian nation.

There were two summits in Singapore in June 2018, and in Vietnam in February 2019, where Trump and Kim disagreed about US-led sanctions against the North.

A third meeting that year at the border between the two Koreas failed to salvage their nuclear talks and Kim has since shunned any diplomacy with the United States and South Korea.

“It would be fantastic if they met with each other in the near future,” Cho said. “And President Lee Jae-myung made it clear to President Trump that he will not be sitting in the driver’s seat. He asked President Trump to become a peacemaker, and he relegated himself to become a pacemaker,” the foreign minister said.

“We don’t mind. On the contrary, we want President Trump (to) exercise his leadership to pull North Korea to the dialogue table.”

Since Trump returned to power in January, he has repeatedly expressed hope of restarting talks with Kim.

The North Korean leader said on Monday he still has “good ­memories” of Trump but urged the United States to drop its demand that the North surrender its nuclear arms as a precondition for resuming long-stalled ­diplomacy.

Trump is expected to visit South Korea next month to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Coope­ration summit, which has prompted media speculation that he might meet Kim again at the border. Trump is also expected to meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during that meeting.

The foreign minister said Lee asked Trump to take the lead because the world has changed and become “much more ­precarious” since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

“Accordingly, we are equally worried about any possible ­military skirmish on the Korean Peninsula,” Cho said. “So we are compelled to explore dialogues with North Korea to reduce the military tension, and at least we want to have a hotline.”

He stressed that denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula “is the imperative – we cannot let it go.” — AP

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