BBC: Kim Jong-un letter to Seoul asks for more summits in 2019
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un has vowed to "frequently" meet South Korea's President Moon Jae-in next year to discuss denuclearisation.
In a rare letter to Seoul, Mr Kim said he wished to pursue peace between the countries and "solve the issue of denuclearising the peninsula together", a spokesman for Mr Moon said.
Mr Kim also expressed "much regret" that he could not visit Seoul in 2018.
He promised to make the trip after Mr Moon visited Pyongyang in September.
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More News On Both Korean Leaders Exchanging Letters To End A Year Of Progress
N. Korean leader calls for more talks with South in new year -- AP
North Korea's Kim wants more summits with Moon next year: Blue House -- Reuters
N. Korea's Kim vows more summits with South next year: Seoul -- AFP
Kim Jong Un sends rare letter to South Korean leader after extraordinary year -- CNN
Korean leaders exchange friendly letters to end year of progress -- NBC
Kim Wants More Summits With Moon to Tackle Nuclear Issue -- Bloomberg
3 comments:
I’m of the opinion Kim’s agenda is to weaken the USA-South Korean alliance in Seoul while stringing the USA along with a separate track of nuclear talks. The inter Korean talks are substantive on domestic issues and confidence measures, non of them permanently reducing the threat form the North.
Over time this could be a Winning strategy by the North showing a friendly face to the people of the South while having difficult talks with the Americans. Of course the Americans get all the blame for blocking a better inter Korean future.
A server outage at Tribune Publishing on Saturday that prevented the distribution of many leading U.S. newspapers, including the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Baltimore Sun was actually nothing of the sort. Instead, it appears to have been a cyber-attack involving what is thought to have been a version of the highly successful Ryuk ransomware family. Interestingly, Ryuk is often attributed to the Lazarus Group which is thought to operate out of China but in the hands of North Korean threat actors.
" server outage at Tribune Publishing on Saturday that prevented the distribution of many leading U.S. newspapers, including the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Baltimore Sun was actually nothing of the sort. "
So why are they other than the WSJ shouting "Russia Russia Russia?"
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