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Clinton discusses Korean summit with South Korean leader

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June 10, 2000 

  

TOKYO, JUNE 9  (AP) - On a quick trip to Asia, U.S. President Bill Clinton met with South Korean President Kim Dae-jung in a show of solidarity before next week's first summit between the long divided Korean nations.

     

"There is really no daylight between the United States and South Korea on the proper approach to North Korea in this summit," Ken Lieberthal, the National Security Council's senior director for Asian affairs, said Thursday.

     

Clinton conferred with Kim after attending the state funeral of the late Japanese Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi. The president also

met briefly with Obuchi's successor, Yoshiro Mori, as he spent less than nine hours in Tokyo before heading home. The Tokyo trip came just one day after the president's return to the White House from a weeklong visit to Europe.

     

Kim is to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in the North's capital, Pyongyang, for three days of talks beginning Monday. It will be the first summit ever between the two Koreas, which were partitioned into the communist North and the pro-Western South in 1945. They fought a three-year war in the early 1950s that left 5 million people dead, injured or missing.

     

The United States had high hopes the meeting might yield a process for the two Koreas to began talking about reunification.

     

During their 25-minute meeting, Kim told Clinton he hoped the summit would be a turning point in resolving tensions, national

security spokesman P.J. Crowley said.

     

The United States announced in September it would ease sanctions against North Korea. Crowley said the procedures for implementing that decision would be announced soon.

     

Immediately upon his arrival in Tokyo, Clinton went to the Akasaka Guest House to meet with Mori. They spent about 30 minutes

discussing the summit of industrialized nations set for next month in Japan, and U.S.-Japan telecommunications trade. 

      

Between meetings, Clinton attended the state funeral for Obuchi, who died last month following a stroke. Along with U.S. Ambassador Thomas Foley, Clinton bowed and laid flowers on a table before a small casket containing Obuchi's ashes; he did not speak during the service.

     

Clinton arrived in Tokyo just as Mori finished meeting with the South Korean president. Lieberthal said Mori noted the importance of cooperation between the United States, South Korea and Japan in getting North Korea to "think in more creative and flexible terms." They did not discuss easing sanctions, Lieberthal said.

     

He said Clinton and Kim were merely "touching base and reaffirming we will work closely together on this."

 

 


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