South Korea presses North on military pact

Park Jae-min, South Korea’s vice minister of defense, said Thursday in Seoul that the Seoul government is “hopeful” that North Korea will respond to calls to form a joint military committee.
(AP/Lee Jin-man)
Park Jae-min, South Korea’s vice minister of defense, said Thursday in Seoul that the Seoul government is “hopeful” that North Korea will respond to calls to form a joint military committee. (AP/Lee Jin-man)

SEOUL, South Korea -- South Korea's vice minister of defense on Thursday called for North Korea to resume cooperation under a 2018 military agreement on reducing tensions, which the North has threatened to abandon over U.S.-South Korean military exercises.

The agreement, which created buffer zones along land and sea boundaries and no-fly zones above the border to prevent clashes, has been crucial in maintaining stability between the Koreas as their relations worsened in recent months, Vice Defense Minister Park Jae-min said.

While there haven't been major skirmishes, North Korea has held back from some critical parts of the agreement, including forming a joint military committee to maintain communication and avoid crisis situations and jointly searching for remains from the 1950-53 Korean War.

Since the collapse of its nuclear diplomacy with the Trump administration in 2019, North Korea has suspended all cooperation with South Korea and threatened to scrap the inter-Korean military agreement while expressing anger over the South's joint military exercises with the U.S., which it insists are invasion rehearsals. The allies describe the drills as defensive in nature but have downsized them in the past few years to provide space for diplomacy and because of the coronavirus pandemic.

While it will be up to leaders and diplomats to persuade North Korea to go in a different direction, South Korea's military is "thoroughly" prepared to push forward with inter-Korean military cooperation whenever diplomacy creates room for it, Park said.

"We are very hopeful that the North would respond to our calls to form the joint military committee," Park said.

The inter-Korean military agreement is one of the few tangible remnants from South Korean President Moon Jae-in's ambitious diplomacy with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Moon's efforts helped set up Kim's first summit with former U.S. President Donald Trump in June 2018.

The Korean leaders met three times that year, exchanging vague vows about a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula and expressing ambitions to reboot inter-Korean engagement when possible, voicing optimism that international sanctions on North Korea could end and allow such projects.

But such hopes were crushed after the collapse of the second meeting between Kim and Trump in 2019, when the Americans rejected North Korean demands for major sanctions relief in exchange for a partial reduction of its nuclear capabilities.

Critics say North Korea already has damaged the spirit of the inter-Korean military agreement with a series of belligerent acts in 2020. It blew up an empty liaison office in the North Korean border town of Kaesong in June and its troops shot and killed a South Korean government official who was found drifting near the sea boundary in September.

While North Korea has suspended since 2018 its testing of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles that could hit the U.S., it has tested new short-range missile systems that experts say potentially expand its ability to deliver nuclear strikes at targets in South Korea, including U.S. military bases.

Park and other South Korean military officials plan to discuss the North Korean nuclear issue and other security matters with global counterparts during next month's annual Seoul Defense Dialogue forum.

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