South Korea Vows To End "Unnecessary Military Tensions" With North Korea

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said Seoul would "consistently seek a path to reduce military tensions and restore inter-Korean trust" and pointed to recent actions like halting propaganda leaflets and loudspeaker broadcasts to North Korea.

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South Korea's Lee Jae Myung speaks during General Debate of the UNGA in New York, Tuesday.
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • South Korean President Lee Jae Myung aims to end military tensions with North Korea
  • Lee advocates a phased approach to North Korea’s denuclearisation at the UN General Assembly
  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un rejects phased denuclearisation and ongoing sanctions
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United Nations:

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung vowed on Tuesday to end a "vicious cycle of unnecessary military tensions" with North Korea, with the aim of achieving peaceful coexistence and shared growth.

In his first speech to the United Nations General Assembly, Lee emphasized his vision of a "phased solution" to the North Korean nuclear issue, "based on a cool-headed perception that denuclearization cannot be achieved in the short term."

On Sunday, the leader of nuclear-armed North Korea, Kim Jong Un, rejected any phased plan, saying recent overtures from Washington and Seoul for dialogue were disingenuous because their fundamental intent to weaken Pyongyang remained unchanged.

Kim said there was no reason to avoid talks with the U.S. if Washington stopped insisting he give up his nuclear weapons, but he would never abandon the nuclear arsenal to end U.S.-led sanctions.

Lee said Seoul would "consistently seek a path to reduce military tensions and restore inter-Korean trust" and pointed to recent actions like halting propaganda leaflets and loudspeaker broadcasts to North Korea.

"By gradually expanding inter-Korean exchanges in cooperation, we will pave the way for sustainable peace," he said.

On Sunday, the North Korean leader said he would never engage in dialogue with Seoul. However, Kim said he had "fond memories" of U.S. President Donald Trump, with whom he held several summits in the U.S. leader's first term, engagement that collapsed over U.S. denuclearization demands.

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Trump said last month he wanted to meet Kim this year, but in a wide-ranging 55-minute speech to the U.N. on Tuesday, the U.S. leader made no mention of North Korea.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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