N.Korea storms out of military talks with S.Korea; No agreement
reached
SOUTH KOREA: North Korea stormed out of military talks
Thursday with South Korea, mocking the other side and ending three days
of high-level negotiations with no agreement because of a lingering
dispute over their sea border.
"We've come to the conclusion that we don't need these fruitless
talks any more," North Korea's chief delegate Lt. Gen. Kim Yong Chol
said at the final negotiating session in the truce village of Panmunjom.
Kim criticized the South for avoiding discussions of what he termed
the "illegal" sea border. The frontier was drawn by the United Nations
at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War, and Seoul has repeatedly rejected
the North's demands that it be changed.
The issue has been a constant obstacle at military talks between the
sides, and the disputed waters that contain rich fishing grounds have
previously been the scene of deadly battles in 1999 and 2002.
South Korea's chief envoy, Maj. Gen. Jung Seung-jo told Kim it was
"highly regrettable" that the negotiations would end without results.
"Your side continued making this demand even though your side knows
very well that our side cannot accept it," Jung said, referring to the
border issue.
The generals from the North and South left the room after the
40-minute session without shaking hands or setting any date for a next
meeting - with Kim appearing red-faced and visibly angry.
The South had called for the two sides to at least reach consensus on
less controversial issues, such as opening a hotline between navy
commanders to prevent future clashes off the peninsula's western coast.
A baby "should learn how to walk first before it starts running,"
said Jung. "We must start with small and easy steps rather than venture
to take big steps."
At the start of Thursday's meeting, the North's Kim mocked his South
Korean counterparts.
"Throughout the past few days, I feel as if I had become a victim of
April Fool's Day jokes," Kim said.
South Korea's attitude, he said, reminded him of an "Aesop's fable"
about a liar.
Jung had tried to seek compromise and called for understanding the
other side's position, but Kim flatly refused and retorted that "it
would go against respecting principles and truth if you have to respect
and accept anything just because it is the other side's view."
Panmunjom, Thursday, AP |