速度与激情7在线观看:Where's the future of two Koreas?

来源:百度文库 编辑:九乡新闻网 时间:2024/04/28 05:41:21

Where's the future of two Koreas?

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North Korea delivered a stinging rejection of the South's proposal for a series of three presidential summits over the next year, giving a blow-by-blow account on Wednesday of a secret meeting between officials of the two countries last month.

A spokesman for the National Defense Commission, the North's supreme leadership body, said a trio of South Korean officials -- from the presidential office, intelligence service and the Unification Ministry -- had tried to persuade the North in a meeting in Beijing to agree to the summits to defuse tensions.

The North's representatives "told them to go back to Seoul at once," he said, according to state media in an embarrassing outline of the meeting which could further strain ties between the neighbors.

Seoul said it was regrettable the North had delivered such a one-sided account and that it did not help to improve Korean relations, but added it stood by its call for dialogue.


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North's leader, Kim Jong-il


The announcement came two days after the same North Korean commission said it would no longer deal with conservative South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, and that it was cutting two of the few remaining channels of inter-Korean dialogue.

"We have made it clear there would never be a summit meeting as long as the South maintains a hostile policy and insists (North Korea) should abandon its nuclear program and apologisapologizee over the two incidents," KCNA state news agency quoted the commission spokesman as saying.

As a precondition for bilateral talks, the South demands that the North apologize for two deadly attacks on the peninsula last year that killed 50 South Koreans.

The North denies responsibility for the first attack, the sinking of the Cheonan warship, and says it was provoked into bombarding Yeonpyeong Island after the South had test-fired shells into nearby disputed waters.


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South Korean President Lee Myung-bak

The South proposed the first summit be held at the border village of Panmunjom in June, a second in August in the North's capital, Pyongyang, and a third on the sidelines of an international nuclear summit in the South next year, the North's spokesman said.

The North said that after rejecting the offer, the South then "begged" for a concession, saying it would be acceptable if the North expressed "regret." It added the South even offered an "envelop of cash" as an inducement.

"The National Defense Commission spokesman's announcement today in a way of conversation with KCNA is a one-sided claim that distorted our true motive and we find it unnecessary to deal with it one by one," retorted a Unification Ministry spokesman in Seoul.

Lee ended a decade of aid without conditions to the North when he took office in 2008 and demanded Pyongyang's leader disarm as a condition for resuming aid and dialogue, angering the reclusive state.


DPRK says the reason it revealed details of the two Koreas' secret meetings is South Korea opened the contacts firstly without speaking the turth or seeking permission of DPRK. If Lee Myung-bak's government does want to change the two Koreas' relations, then they should not make the contents of secret meetings be public, and  it would "never deal with" South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and his government, said by DPRK's National Defence Commission.

On May 18, a spokesman of South Korea did told media the secret connects of two Koreas out of expectation and also revealed S. Korean President Li Myung-bak would like to invite the North's leader, Kim Jong-il, to join the leaders of about 50 other countries at a nuclear summit in Seoul next year if DPRK gave up nuclear weapons.


Analysis says the high-profile of DPRK's revealing of the secret contacts shows that even a minimum of trust between two Korean governments has been shattered, and at the same time, it is DPRK's strategy of pressing as well as humiliating S. Korea since Lee Myung-bak had been emphasizing that he would not "talk for talk" but offered invitation willingly this time.

As of now, no one knows whether DPRK's "never deal" will realy last to one year's later, by then current South Korean Government will end its term, and it seems like DPRK has already pinned its hope for two Koreas' talking on the next S. Korean government.