South Korea | Seoul offers aid plan to Pyongyang to denuclearize the peninsula

(SEOUL) South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol announced on Monday that he would offer a major aid package to Pyongyang in exchange for denuclearization, a type of offer long scorned by North Korea.

Posted yesterday at 11:09 p.m.

Believing that denuclearization is “essential” for a lasting peace in the peninsula, Mr Yoon detailed his offer which would include food, energy, but also aid for the modernization of infrastructure such as ports, airports and hospitals.

This plan “will significantly improve North Korea’s economy and the standard of living of its people in stages, if the North ceases to develop its nuclear program and embarks on a genuine and substantial process of denuclearization”, said Mr. Yoon during a speech marking the anniversary of the end of Japanese colonial rule in 1945.

Last week, Pyongyang threatened to “eradicate” South Korean officials, blaming Seoul for the country’s COVID-19 outbreak.

In July, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said he was “ready to mobilize” his nuclear capabilities in the event of war with the United States or South Korea.

For specialists in the region, the chances of seeing Pyongyang accept this offer, already mentioned during Mr. Yoon’s inauguration speech, are very slim, since the North, which invests a large part of its GDP in its program of arms, has long made it clear that it would not enter into such an agreement.

North Korea conducted a record series of weapons tests this year, including the firing of a full-range intercontinental ballistic missile, the first since 2017.

Washington and Seoul have repeatedly warned in recent months that the North is preparing to carry out another nuclear test, which would be the seventh in its history.


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