While condemning North Korea over its latest nuclear test, the leaders of Russia and South Korea seemed far apart on the issue of stepping up sanctions against the country after a meeting yesterday in the Russian port city of Vladivostok.
Speaking after the meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, Russian President Vladimir Putin called for talks with North Korea, saying sanctions are not a solution to the nation’s nuclear and missile development.
Moon had urged Moscow to support stronger sanctions against North Korea, which on Sunday conducted its sixth nuclear test in what it claimed was a detonation of a thermonuclear weapon built for missiles capable of reaching the US mainland.
“We should not give in to emotions and push Pyongyang into a corner,” Putin said at a news conference after the meeting, held on the sidelines of a conference on economic development of Russia’s Far East region. “As never before everyone should show restraint and refrain from steps leading to escalation and tensions.”
Moon said the leaders agreed that reducing regional tension and “quickly solving” the security challenges posed by North Korea’s nuclear and missile program were critical.
Ahead of his meeting with Putin, Moon said the situation could get out of hand if Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear tests are not stopped.
Moon urged Russia to back stronger sanctions, including the cutting off oil supplies, but Putin expressed concern that such moves would hurt regular North Koreans, said Yoon Young-chan, Moon’s chief press secretary.
“Myself and President Putin share a view that North Korea has gone the wrong way with its nuclear and missile program, and that easing tension on the Korean Peninsula is an urgent issue,” Moon said during the news conference.
He complimented Putin and the Russian government over what he said were a variety of efforts to find diplomatic solutions to the North Korean problem.
In a telephone conversation with Putin on Monday before his trip to Russia, Moon also called for a ban on overseas North Korean workers, who are seen as a key foreign currency source for the North.
Putin told Moon that the North Korean problem should be solved diplomatically, according to Seoul’s presidential office.
Moon, a liberal who took office in May, had initially showed a preference for a diplomatic approach on North Korea, but his government has since taken a harder stance as the North continued its torrid pace in weapons tests.
In an interview with the Russian news agency TASS on Tuesday, Moon said he believes now is not the time for talks and that it is important for the international community to strengthen pressure against North Korea.
The South Korean Ministry of National Defense yesterday said the US military would begin adding more launchers to a contentious high-tech US missile defense system in South Korea today to better cope with North Korean threats.
The deployment of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system has angered not only North Korea, but also China and Russia, which see the system’s powerful radars as a security threat.
A THAAD battery normally consists of six launchers that can fire up to 48 interceptor missiles, but only two launchers have been operational so far at the site in rural Seongju.
Speaking in China on Tuesday, Putin condemned North Korea’s nuclear test as provocative, but said Russia views sanctions as “useless and ineffective.”
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is meeting Putin in Vladivostok today, said before his departure from Japan that “we must make North Korea understand there is no bright future for the country if it pursues the current path.”
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