United States About the dismantling of a North Korean nuclear site, South Korean Foreign Minister
Kang Kyung-wha said in October 2018 that she would like US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo to agree to a declaration ending the Korean War as part of security guarantees to increase North Korean confidence in a denuclearization agreement. Although Pompeo said that he was pleased to negotiate with Kim Jong Un about dismantling nuclear facilities at the
Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center, he hesitated to express an opinion on the possibility of an "end-of-Korean war declaration". According to a
Washington Post analysis, sufficient momentum exists for a declaration ending the Korean War as a useful tool for the Trump administration to speed up North Korea's denuclearization. The declaration would be a symbolic diplomatic measure, requiring fewer judicial obstacles than a peace treaty. Another factor making a declaration more timely is the warming relationship between the two Koreas as a result of several
inter-Korean summits.
CNN reported that the Trump administration is willing to end the Korean War to denuclearize North Korea.
South Korea The
White House was petitioned about a peace treaty on the Korean Peninsula on March 15, 2018, and the petition received the required number of signatures within a month. Regarding a third inter-Korean summit and a permanent peace solution on the Korean Peninsula, about 83 percent of the South Korean people support a diplomatic solution. According to South Korean president
Moon Jae-in, the Korean War will end sooner rather than later. Moon is trying to persuade Kim Jong Un to give up his nuclear program and weapons by showing him a brighter economic future with South Korean cooperation. In the context of the peace process, reunification of the Korean Peninsula is a strategic agenda that the current South Korean government has been focusing on. In particular, President
Park Geun-hye, who preceded President Moon Jae-in, emphasized the importance of reunification, making a related comment that a single Korea "would be a great benefit for neighboring countries". This has been a hot topic for both the ruling and opposition parties in the government.
North Korea KCNA said in a commentary that there would be "such... steps as eternal dismantlement" of its DPRK nuclear complex "if the US takes a corresponding measure". North Korean leader Kim Jong Un mentioned several positive implications of reunification between South and North Korea. In Pyongyang during the
Arirang Mass Games-2018 Festival, South Korean President Moon Jae-in delivered a seven-minute speech to a crowd of more than 150,000 people, urging the two Koreas to take a giant step toward denuclearization and lasting peace. South Korean President Moon Jae-in's speech about his vision of a unified Korea may have resonated with his North Korean audience, according to Andrei Abrahamian, a fellow at the Pacific Forum. The Korean War is over. This can be interpreted to mean that Kim Jong Un, the first North Korean leader to visit South Korea, 'created new history.' To end 70 years of war, North Korea agreed to end the Korean War through peace talks.
United Kingdom The
British Government advised circumspect travel to North Korea as of December 21, 2018. It summarized the current political situation on Korean peniunsula. For example, the increasing tension on the Korean Peninsula became worse in 2017 due to a series of nuclear and ICBM missile tests. On 12 June, there was a meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un.
The Panmunjom Declaration signed during the
inter-Korean summit on 27 April pledged to consent to a peace treaty to officially end the
Korean War 1950-53 by the end of 2018. They requested the British citizens who are living in North Korea or those who decided to travel there independently to notify
the British embassy in Pyongyang about their travel plans before, or on arrival.
Mongolia Mongolia as a country that transitioned from communism to democracy, it hoped to support a unified Republic of Korea for peace and development in Northeast Asia, and held opinions at the Ulaanbaatar Dialogue (UB) and Mongolian Forum in June 2023. At the Mongolian Ulaanbaatar Dialogue, the importance of cooperation in Northeast Asia was emphasized in a situation where the number of nuclear-armed countries and tensions between the United States, China, North and South Korea, and China-Taiwan are increasing. The 'Ulaanbaatar Dialogue', an international conference on security in Northeast Asia, is held by the Mongolian government, attendees of the U.S.A, Russia, China, Japan, DPRK (North Korea), ROK (South Korea), Germany, France and the Netherlands. 30-35 countries and 10 international organizations participated and the event was held from 2013 to 2023, except for 2020 and 2021 as per Covid-19.
Timeline 2018 In March 2018,
Kyodo News reported that Chinese leader
Xi Jinping suggested a Korean peace treaty to Donald Trump in a phone conversation and emphasised that four countries (the US, South and North Korea, and China) should be included. Xi and Moon Jae-in agreed on mutual efforts to bring about a positive change to conditions surrounding the Korean Peninsula after the
April 2018 inter-Korean summit. On April 16, 2018, Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe at
Mar-a-Lago. Trump announced that Japan and the US had a shared objective in resolving the North Korea issue, saying that the Korean War had not yet ended but endorsing its end. He tweeted on 27 April, "KOREAN WAR TO END! The United States, and all of its GREAT people, should be very proud of what is now taking place in Korea!" The president promised to work with Moon to
pressure North Korea into abandoning its ICBM and nuclear-weapons programs, which have caused anxiety in the
Asia-Pacific region for years. . In an April 29
Fox News interview,
US Senate Committee on Armed Services member
Lindsey Graham said that North Korea could reach the US with nuclear weapons; given the threat of retaliation, however, they should negotiate their nuclear program and the Kim government's safety, stability and economic development. According to Graham, the
nuclear deal with
Iran was useless; Iran enriches their
nuclear fuel without third-party inspection, and could quickly develop atomic weapons. An agreement with North Korea should include verification of their nuclear program. In a June 1
CNBC interview about a meeting with North Korean aide
Kim Yong Chol at the
White House, Trump said that he did not like North Korea's meeting with Russia but it was time to end the war. Former Trump adviser
Sebastian Gorka defended Trump's rhetoric in a June 12
Fox Business Network, after the Trump-Kim summit. It was reported on July 24 that North Korea was dismantling a nuclear rocket-launching and test site near
Tongchang-ri, as Kim had promised during the
2018 Trump–Kim summit. Moon called the move "a good sign for North Korea's denuclearization" and "Kim Jong Un's sincerity". Three days later, Korean Council for Reconciliation and Cooperation chairman Kim Hong-gul expressed
Pyongyang's eagerness to sign a declaration ending the war and its willingness to speed up denuclearization based on mutual trust between the US and North Korea. Although North Korea had wanted a peace treaty, an "end-of-war declaration" would be the first step towards speedier denuclearization. s and
MIAs. The remains were brought from the eastern city of
Wonsan to
Osan Air Base, near
Seoul. That day, the 65th anniversary of the Korean War
armistice, North Korea returned the remains of 55 American military-service members who were killed during the Korean War to the United States. The
Korean Central News Agency was silent on the return of the remains. According to
Center for the National Interest director of defense studies, Trump should respond to the goodwill gesture with a bold move. Although a comprehensive denuclearization agreement was made during the Trump-Kim summit, a
peace treaty would be a crucial condition for North Korea to give up their nuclear arsenal and ICBM program. The US would not lose face, since the Korean War ended 65 years ago and that declaration should have been finalized decades ago. On August 4, during the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum 2018, North Korea's nuclear program was the main agenda item. ASEAN foreign ministers issued a joint statement calling for "complete denuclearization", a change from 2017's call for "complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization". South Korean foreign minister
Kang Kyung-wha said that she had "considerable" consultation about the declaration with her Chinese and US counterparts. According to Chinese foreign minister
Wang Yi, "Everyone can announce a declaration ending the war if they do not want the war to happen again". North Korean foreign minister
Ri Yong-ho said that he was "alarmed" by US insistence on maintaining sanctions until denuclearization and what he said was US reluctance to declare a formal end to the Korean War. USFK maintains several nuclear bomber fighters, and North Korea demanded a US safety guarantee in exchange for giving up their nuclear-weapons program. North Korea wants a second Trump–Kim summit to resolve the gridlocked security guarantee-denuclearization negotiations. A second summit was reportedly possible before the end of 2018.
2019 On February 27–28, 2019, the
North Korea–United States Summit in Hanoi was held. Kim Jong Un departed from Pyongyang on February 23, according to images released by the
KCNA news agency. It was 4,500 kilometres (2,800 mi) one way trip took about 60 hours. The train arrived in
Đồng Đăng railway station of the Vietnamese border city of Đồng Đăng on Tuesday February 26, and Kim traveled to Hanoi by vehicle. U.S president Donald Trump met with Kim Jong Un on February 27–28, 2019, in
Hanoi,
Vietnam, in the second
summit meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea. On February 28, 2019, the
White House published that the summit was cut short and that no deal was reached, with Trump later elaborating that it was because North Korea wanted an end to all
sanctions. On the other hand,
North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho stated that the country only sought a partial lifting of five
United Nations sanctions placed on North Korea during 2016–17. during
KOREAS-U.S. DMZ summit 2019 Trump stepping into the North Korean territory by crossing the low stone curb separating the North and South at 3:45 p.m.
KST About the end of March, which was one month after the summit ended,
Reuters revealed that on the second day of the summit U.S. president passed DPRK Kim a note that bluntly called for North Korea to surrender all its nuclear weapons and fuel, in similar fashion to the
“Libya model,” a proposal the North Koreans had repeatedly rejected. The scheduled ceremonial luncheon was then abruptly canceled and the summit ended. Dr. Chiew-Ping Hoo, a professor at the
National University of Malaysia, said that the negotiations at the Hanoi summit changed the minute John Bolton was added at the eleventh-hour to the panel. He advised
to change the goal-post from the YongByon Nuclear site, to add other sites that produced weapons of mass destruction. Trump had to agree with Bolton's advice due to U.S. domestic issues, which resulted in a no-deal outcome for the summit. According to Jenny Town, Washington based, think-tank and North Korean expert, "it's Bolton's proposal in 2004, has been rejected more than once and, to bring it up again… would rather be insulting.” She also said that the US should have learned that this wasn't effective diplomacy, and shows they haven't learned how to properly negotiate. Former special assistant to President
Ronald Reagan, and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute,
Doug Bandow, said that President Trump was unrealistically demanding that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un dismantle all his nuclear facilities, whereas Kim was only agreeing to shutting down the YongByon Nuclear facility in exchange for a partial lifting of a few UN sanctions against his country. Asking continuously for an unrealistic "all nukes for all sanctions deal" is deemed as malicious in its intent and illogical. Douglas Dillon Professor of Government at the
Harvard Kennedy School, and former director of Harvard's Belfer Center, Graham T. Allison, believes that the Hanoi summit is not a whole failure, despite some public opinion, and even compared this to the
Reagan-
Gorbachev era. President Reagan also had to deal with negative public opinion regarding his dealings with the
USSR, but he was able to remove all of the Soviet Union's intermediate nuclear-armed missiles with an INF deal. Compared to the USSR, North Korea is also communist country, but President Trump was able to deal with the top leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un, something neither Bush nor Obama were able to do in their combined 16- year term. According to Abby Bard, a research associate for Asia policy at the
Center for American Progress, President Trump's and Kim's teams need critical space between them to build trust and verify the intentions between the two parties. Working level meetings between both teams are needed to arrange the details that would result in bigger bargains without miscalculations and misunderstandings. In order for the two leaders to reach a deal, their diplomatic teams need to work together. On September 10, Trump sacked the national security adviser John Bolton as he strongly disagreed with John Bolton's suggestion about applying
Libyan model to North Korea nuclear deal and mentioning
Muammar Gaddafi. However, Bolton himself claims he was not sacked but resigned. Donald Trump selected hostage negotiator of DPRK
Robert C. O'Brien as the new
U.S. national security adviser. Some of Senate Republicans including
Lindsey Graham praised Mr Trump's pick and mentioned, He's got great negotiating skills, and "he would be a very sound policy adviser." North Korea envoy
Stephen Biegun confirmed as deputy secretary of state as Pompeo's number two. While Pompeo was recognized as a protector of Trump, Biegun is unknown for his partisanship. From Dec 15 to 21, Biegun visited South Korea, Japan and China as nuclear tensions climb with North Korea. On December 16,
China and
Russia proposed that the U.N. Security Council lift a ban on some parts of restrictions including DPRK exporting sea food, textiles and infrastructure projects. China's ambassador of U.N. announced that the current standoff was a failure to counter to “positive steps” taken by North Korea toward denuclearisation. A close U.S. ally, South Korea has also supported the official proposal of easing some sanctions to DPRK, and requested for diplomatic efforts to be focused on resuming nuclear talks.
2020 U.S. President Trump said to his advisers he doesn't want another summit with North Korea's leader Kim before the U.S. presidential election that year. It is understood that as Trump might be focused on his re-election campaign, his desire to engage on the nuclear issue has waned. Despite Trump's disinterest, the top foreign policy advisers were still trying to build a bridge of the nuclear deal between two leaders. National security adviser
Robert C. O'Brien said "President Trump has shown both with the peace plan and what is right for the American people although it's unpopular, risky, right up until the day of the election." The US Special Representative to North Korea and the deputy secretary of state,
Steve Biegun, have remained engaged in working-level talks with the DPRK. North Korea has slowed down its missile tests, but remains focused on its nuclear program. The foreign ministry adviser of DPRK,
Kim Kye Gwan, mentioned that the personal relationship between two leaders is not enough to restart nuclear negotiations. Kim Jong Un declared that the DPRK would abandon its moratorium on nuclear and long-range ballistic missile tests and would soon introduce "a new strategic weapon" based on future "attitude" of the US.
2023 On November 23, 2023, North Korea terminated its 2018 agreement with South Korea, citing escalating military provocations, and plans to deploy military forces along the military demarcation line. ==See also==