North Korea Dialogue Must Continue

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It's Important to Keep Momentum for Dialogue It is regrettable that North Korea has again threatened to suspend all inter-Korean talks and attack South Korea. On Friday, the North's National Defense Commission, which is chaired by its leader Kim Jong-il, issued an unusually harsh criticism of Seoul's reported action plan to deal with any emergency situation in the communist state. The contingency plan has apparently angered the isolated North that has already been hit by famine, poverty, oppression and economic failure. In a statement issued by a spokesman of the commission, the North has threatened to launch a ``sacred war" of retaliation to blow away the South Korean government, including the presidential office. Describing the action plan as Seoul's plot to bring a regime collapse to the North, the statement has also called for the dismantlement of the South's Ministry of National Unification and the National Intelligence Service. In addition, the North has revealed its intention of halting all inter-Korean dialogue and excluding the South from the six-nation denuclearization talks and other negotiations to discuss how to promote peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. It is difficult to think little of the threat because the world's last Stalinist country had never used such an expression as a ``sacred war" before. It was also the first time that the defense commission issued such a statement against the South since its establishment in 1998. The body holds the highest authority in the North. On Thursday, South Korean media carried unconfirmed reports that the Seoul government drew the new action plan, code-named ``Recovery," late last year to cope with unpredictable consequences that may take place in the North. It allegedly included possible scenarios to handle Kim's sudden death, a military coup, popular revolts or other emergencies that may cause the collapse of the military regime. Such scenarios must have been a grave challenge to the North's leadership, which is engrossed in tightening its grip on power and ensuring a hereditary succession of power from the ailing Kim to his third son Jung-un. It is not desirable for the North to overreact to the reports because it will only raise tensions on the peninsula at a time when Pyongyang was seemingly shifting from saber-rattling to productive dialogue. A few hours before issuing the statement, the North expressed its intention to accept 10,000 tons of corn offered in October by the South. On Thursday, it proposed holding working-level talks with Seoul officials to discuss ways of resuming the suspended Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong tourism programs for South Koreans. On Monday, it also offered to hold talks on how to replace the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty. We hope that the North's threat is just confined to symbolic rhetoric in order not to go back to its brinksmanship of launching long-range missiles and conducting a nuclear bomb test again. First of all, the North must keep having inter-Korean dialogue to move the peace process and reconciliation forward. It also should return to the six-party talks to implement its denuclearization commitments in return for security guarantees, diplomatic incentives and economic assistance from the international community.

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It's Important to Keep Momentum for Dialogue It is regrettable that North Korea has again threatened to suspend all inter-Korean talks and attack South Korea. On Friday, the North's National Defense Commission, which is chaired by its leader Kim Jong-il, issued an unusually harsh criticism of Seoul's reported action plan to deal with any emergency situation in the communist state. The contingency plan has apparently angered the isolated North that has already been hit by famine, poverty, oppression and economic failure. In a statement issued by a spokesman of the commission, the North has threatened to launch a ``sacred war" of retaliation to blow away the South Korean government, including the presidential office. Describing the action plan as Seoul's plot to bring a regime collapse to the North, the statement has also called for the dismantlement of the South's Ministry of National Unification and the National Intelligence Service. In addition, the North has revealed its intention of halting all inter-Korean dialogue and excluding the South from the six-nation denuclearization talks and other negotiations to discuss how to promote peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. It is difficult to think little of the threat because the world's last Stalinist country had never used such an expression as a ``sacred war" before. It was also the first time that the defense commission issued such a statement against the South since its establishment in 1998. The body holds the highest authority in the North. On Thursday, South Korean media carried unconfirmed reports that the Seoul government drew the new action plan, code-named ``Recovery," late last year to cope with unpredictable consequences that may take place in the North. It allegedly included possible scenarios to handle Kim's sudden death, a military coup, popular revolts or other emergencies that may cause the collapse of the military regime. Such scenarios must have been a grave challenge to the North's leadership, which is engrossed in tightening its grip on power and ensuring a hereditary succession of power from the ailing Kim to his third son Jung-un. It is not desirable for the North to overreact to the reports because it will only raise tensions on the peninsula at a time when Pyongyang was seemingly shifting from saber-rattling to productive dialogue. A few hours before issuing the statement, the North expressed its intention to accept 10,000 tons of corn offered in October by the South. On Thursday, it proposed holding working-level talks with Seoul officials to discuss ways of resuming the suspended Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong tourism programs for South Koreans. On Monday, it also offered to hold talks on how to replace the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty. We hope that the North's threat is just confined to symbolic rhetoric in order not to go back to its brinksmanship of launching long-range missiles and conducting a nuclear bomb test again. First of all, the North must keep having inter-Korean dialogue to move the peace process and reconciliation forward. It also should return to the six-party talks to implement its denuclearization commitments in return for security guarantees, diplomatic incentives and economic assistance from the international community.

Reader's Comments â–¶ Other View Notice From KT Website Manager Bad language will not be tolerated. All comments considered discriminatory against race or sex, or which are considered offensive against certain people, will be eliminated by the manager. Violators will be deprived of their membership. Please stay on topic. â–¶ Managerial regulations You must log in to use this service. â—€ Back â–²Top     • Foul-Mouthed Teacher Earns Praises From Students • 'Koreans Are Less Tolerant Toward Criticism' • 'Worst Advice Father Can Give to Children' • S. Korea, Japan Oppose Lifting NK Sanctions • Women Should Change Society by Becoming Leaders • Programs Sought for Retiring Baby Boomers • Robot Maid Combats Unclean Households • Haiti, Humanitarian Relief and American Tradition • Illusion of Economic Recovery • Why Big Banks Will Get Bigger Haiti Quake Disaster in Haiti           +Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw     Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF    Home > Newszone > Opinion > Editorial > Sunday, January 17, 2010 | 10:54 p.m. ET   Nation   Biz/Finance   Technology   Arts & Living   Sports   Opinion     Editorial       Thoughts of the Times       Today`s Column       Desk Column       Letter to the Editor       The Dawn of Modern Korea       Another Korea       What`s Your Take?       Letter from America       Random Walk       Sean Hayes       Michael Breen       Views From Overseas       Jon Huer       Tom Plate       Living Science       Pacific Perspective       Guest Column       Times Forum       Readers` Forum       Cartoon       Great and Simple Things       Back Home       Ideas & Ideals       Jim Hoagland       Choi Yearn-hong       Today in History       Reporter's Notebook       Washington Lounge       Hyon O'Brien     Community   Special         The Learning Times      Editorial Listening      Phone English      Dear Abby      Domestic News      Foreign News      Screen English      Live English in Drama      Discovery Education        Ancient Idiom        iBT Writing        English Writing I      English Writing II        English Grammar      Grasping Vocab      iBT Vocab      Korean Language              Junior Writing      Junior Reading      Junior Reporter            01-17-2010 17:49 North's Threat Again

It's Important to Keep Momentum for Dialogue It is regrettable that North Korea has again threatened to suspend all inter-Korean talks and attack South Korea. On Friday, the North's National Defense Commission, which is chaired by its leader Kim Jong-il, issued an unusually harsh criticism of Seoul's reported action plan to deal with any emergency situation in the communist state. The contingency plan has apparently angered the isolated North that has already been hit by famine, poverty, oppression and economic failure. In a statement issued by a spokesman of the commission, the North has threatened to launch a ``sacred war" of retaliation to blow away the South Korean government, including the presidential office. Describing the action plan as Seoul's plot to bring a regime collapse to the North, the statement has also called for the dismantlement of the South's Ministry of National Unification and the National Intelligence Service. In addition, the North has revealed its intention of halting all inter-Korean dialogue and excluding the South from the six-nation denuclearization talks and other negotiations to discuss how to promote peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. It is difficult to think little of the threat because the world's last Stalinist country had never used such an expression as a ``sacred war" before. It was also the first time that the defense commission issued such a statement against the South since its establishment in 1998. The body holds the highest authority in the North. On Thursday, South Korean media carried unconfirmed reports that the Seoul government drew the new action plan, code-named ``Recovery," late last year to cope with unpredictable consequences that may take place in the North. It allegedly included possible scenarios to handle Kim's sudden death, a military coup, popular revolts or other emergencies that may cause the collapse of the military regime. Such scenarios must have been a grave challenge to the North's leadership, which is engrossed in tightening its grip on power and ensuring a hereditary succession of power from the ailing Kim to his third son Jung-un. It is not desirable for the North to overreact to the reports because it will only raise tensions on the peninsula at a time when Pyongyang was seemingly shifting from saber-rattling to productive dialogue. A few hours before issuing the statement, the North expressed its intention to accept 10,000 tons of corn offered in October by the South. On Thursday, it proposed holding working-level talks with Seoul officials to discuss ways of resuming the suspended Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong tourism programs for South Koreans. On Monday, it also offered to hold talks on how to replace the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty. We hope that the North's threat is just confined to symbolic rhetoric in order not to go back to its brinksmanship of launching long-range missiles and conducting a nuclear bomb test again. First of all, the North must keep having inter-Korean dialogue to move the peace process and reconciliation forward. It also should return to the six-party talks to implement its denuclearization commitments in return for security guarantees, diplomatic incentives and economic assistance from the international community.

Reader's Comments â–¶ Other View Notice From KT Website Manager Bad language will not be tolerated. All comments considered discriminatory against race or sex, or which are considered offensive against certain people, will be eliminated by the manager. Violators will be deprived of their membership. Please stay on topic. â–¶ Managerial regulations You must log in to use this service. â—€ Back â–²Top     • Foul-Mouthed Teacher Earns Praises From Students • 'Koreans Are Less Tolerant Toward Criticism' • 'Worst Advice Father Can Give to Children' • S. Korea, Japan Oppose Lifting NK Sanctions • Women Should Change Society by Becoming Leaders • Programs Sought for Retiring Baby Boomers • Robot Maid Combats Unclean Households • Haiti, Humanitarian Relief and American Tradition • Illusion of Economic Recovery • Why Big Banks Will Get Bigger Haiti Quake Disaster in Haiti           +Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw     Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF    Home > Newszone > Opinion > Editorial > Sunday, January 17, 2010 | 10:54 p.m. ET   Nation   Biz/Finance   Technology   Arts & Living   Sports   Opinion     Editorial       Thoughts of the Times       Today`s Column       Desk Column       Letter to the Editor       The Dawn of Modern Korea       Another Korea       What`s Your Take?       Letter from America       Random Walk       Sean Hayes       Michael Breen       Views From Overseas       Jon Huer       Tom Plate       Living Science       Pacific Perspective       Guest Column       Times Forum       Readers` Forum       Cartoon       Great and Simple Things       Back Home       Ideas & Ideals       Jim Hoagland       Choi Yearn-hong       Today in History       Reporter's Notebook       Washington Lounge       Hyon O'Brien     Community   Special         The Learning Times      Editorial Listening      Phone English      Dear Abby      Domestic News      Foreign News      Screen English      Live English in Drama      Discovery Education        Ancient Idiom        iBT Writing        English Writing I      English Writing II        English Grammar      Grasping Vocab      iBT Vocab      Korean Language              Junior Writing      Junior Reading      Junior Reporter            01-17-2010 17:49 North's Threat Again

It's Important to Keep Momentum for Dialogue It is regrettable that North Korea has again threatened to suspend all inter-Korean talks and attack South Korea. On Friday, the North's National Defense Commission, which is chaired by its leader Kim Jong-il, issued an unusually harsh criticism of Seoul's reported action plan to deal with any emergency situation in the communist state. The contingency plan has apparently angered the isolated North that has already been hit by famine, poverty, oppression and economic failure. In a statement issued by a spokesman of the commission, the North has threatened to launch a ``sacred war" of retaliation to blow away the South Korean government, including the presidential office. Describing the action plan as Seoul's plot to bring a regime collapse to the North, the statement has also called for the dismantlement of the South's Ministry of National Unification and the National Intelligence Service. In addition, the North has revealed its intention of halting all inter-Korean dialogue and excluding the South from the six-nation denuclearization talks and other negotiations to discuss how to promote peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. It is difficult to think little of the threat because the world's last Stalinist country had never used such an expression as a ``sacred war" before. It was also the first time that the defense commission issued such a statement against the South since its establishment in 1998. The body holds the highest authority in the North. On Thursday, South Korean media carried unconfirmed reports that the Seoul government drew the new action plan, code-named ``Recovery," late last year to cope with unpredictable consequences that may take place in the North. It allegedly included possible scenarios to handle Kim's sudden death, a military coup, popular revolts or other emergencies that may cause the collapse of the military regime. Such scenarios must have been a grave challenge to the North's leadership, which is engrossed in tightening its grip on power and ensuring a hereditary succession of power from the ailing Kim to his third son Jung-un. It is not desirable for the North to overreact to the reports because it will only raise tensions on the peninsula at a time when Pyongyang was seemingly shifting from saber-rattling to productive dialogue. A few hours before issuing the statement, the North expressed its intention to accept 10,000 tons of corn offered in October by the South. On Thursday, it proposed holding working-level talks with Seoul officials to discuss ways of resuming the suspended Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong tourism programs for South Koreans. On Monday, it also offered to hold talks on how to replace the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty. We hope that the North's threat is just confined to symbolic rhetoric in order not to go back to its brinksmanship of launching long-range missiles and conducting a nuclear bomb test again. First of all, the North must keep having inter-Korean dialogue to move the peace process and reconciliation forward. It also should return to the six-party talks to implement its denuclearization commitments in return for security guarantees, diplomatic incentives and economic assistance from the international community.

Reader's Comments â–¶ Other View Notice From KT Website Manager Bad language will not be tolerated. All comments considered discriminatory against race or sex, or which are considered offensive against certain people, will be eliminated by the manager. Violators will be deprived of their membership. Please stay on topic. â–¶ Managerial regulations You must log in to use this service. â—€ Back â–²Top     • Foul-Mouthed Teacher Earns Praises From Students • 'Koreans Are Less Tolerant Toward Criticism' • 'Worst Advice Father Can Give to Children' • S. Korea, Japan Oppose Lifting NK Sanctions • Women Should Change Society by Becoming Leaders • Programs Sought for Retiring Baby Boomers • Robot Maid Combats Unclean Households • Haiti, Humanitarian Relief and American Tradition • Illusion of Economic Recovery • Why Big Banks Will Get Bigger Haiti Quake Disaster in Haiti           +Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw     Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF    Home > Newszone > Opinion > Editorial > Sunday, January 17, 2010 | 10:54 p.m. ET   Nation   Biz/Finance   Technology   Arts & Living   Sports   Opinion     Editorial       Thoughts of the Times       Today`s Column       Desk Column       Letter to the Editor       The Dawn of Modern Korea       Another Korea       What`s Your Take?       Letter from America       Random Walk       Sean Hayes       Michael Breen       Views From Overseas       Jon Huer       Tom Plate       Living Science       Pacific Perspective       Guest Column       Times Forum       Readers` Forum       Cartoon       Great and Simple Things       Back Home       Ideas & Ideals       Jim Hoagland       Choi Yearn-hong       Today in History       Reporter's Notebook       Washington Lounge       Hyon O'Brien     Community   Special         The Learning Times      Editorial Listening      Phone English      Dear Abby      Domestic News      Foreign News      Screen English      Live English in Drama      Discovery Education        Ancient Idiom        iBT Writing        English Writing I      English Writing II        English Grammar      Grasping Vocab      iBT Vocab      Korean Language              Junior Writing      Junior Reading      Junior Reporter            01-17-2010 17:49 North's Threat Again

It's Important to Keep Momentum for Dialogue It is regrettable that North Korea has again threatened to suspend all inter-Korean talks and attack South Korea. On Friday, the North's National Defense Commission, which is chaired by its leader Kim Jong-il, issued an unusually harsh criticism of Seoul's reported action plan to deal with any emergency situation in the communist state. The contingency plan has apparently angered the isolated North that has already been hit by famine, poverty, oppression and economic failure. In a statement issued by a spokesman of the commission, the North has threatened to launch a ``sacred war" of retaliation to blow away the South Korean government, including the presidential office. Describing the action plan as Seoul's plot to bring a regime collapse to the North, the statement has also called for the dismantlement of the South's Ministry of National Unification and the National Intelligence Service. In addition, the North has revealed its intention of halting all inter-Korean dialogue and excluding the South from the six-nation denuclearization talks and other negotiations to discuss how to promote peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. It is difficult to think little of the threat because the world's last Stalinist country had never used such an expression as a ``sacred war" before. It was also the first time that the defense commission issued such a statement against the South since its establishment in 1998. The body holds the highest authority in the North. On Thursday, South Korean media carried unconfirmed reports that the Seoul government drew the new action plan, code-named ``Recovery," late last year to cope with unpredictable consequences that may take place in the North. It allegedly included possible scenarios to handle Kim's sudden death, a military coup, popular revolts or other emergencies that may cause the collapse of the military regime. Such scenarios must have been a grave challenge to the North's leadership, which is engrossed in tightening its grip on power and ensuring a hereditary succession of power from the ailing Kim to his third son Jung-un. It is not desirable for the North to overreact to the reports because it will only raise tensions on the peninsula at a time when Pyongyang was seemingly shifting from saber-rattling to productive dialogue. A few hours before issuing the statement, the North expressed its intention to accept 10,000 tons of corn offered in October by the South. On Thursday, it proposed holding working-level talks with Seoul officials to discuss ways of resuming the suspended Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong tourism programs for South Koreans. On Monday, it also offered to hold talks on how to replace the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty. We hope that the North's threat is just confined to symbolic rhetoric in order not to go back to its brinksmanship of launching long-range missiles and conducting a nuclear bomb test again. First of all, the North must keep having inter-Korean dialogue to move the peace process and reconciliation forward. It also should return to the six-party talks to implement its denuclearization commitments in return for security guarantees, diplomatic incentives and economic assistance from the international community.

Reader's Comments â–¶ Other View Notice From KT Website Manager Bad language will not be tolerated. All comments considered discriminatory against race or sex, or which are considered offensive against certain people, will be eliminated by the manager. Violators will be deprived of their membership. Please stay on topic. â–¶ Managerial regulations You must log in to use this service. â—€ Back â–²Top     • Foul-Mouthed Teacher Earns Praises From Students • 'Koreans Are Less Tolerant Toward Criticism' • 'Worst Advice Father Can Give to Children' • S. Korea, Japan Oppose Lifting NK Sanctions • Women Should Change Society by Becoming Leaders • Programs Sought for Retiring Baby Boomers • Robot Maid Combats Unclean Households • Haiti, Humanitarian Relief and American Tradition • Illusion of Economic Recovery • Why Big Banks Will Get Bigger Haiti Quake Disaster in Haiti   Read Full Article »
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