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Chinese President Xi Jinping holds talks with DPRK leader Kim Jong Un in Dalian

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Chinese President Xi Jinping holds talks with DPRK leader Kim Jong Un in Dalian

CGTN
2018-05-08


Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and Chinese president, met Kim Jong Un, chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) and chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, on May 7-8.

In a cordial and friendly atmosphere, the top leaders of the two parties and the two countries had an all-round and in-depth exchange of views on China-DPRK relations and major issues of common concern.

"After the first meeting between me and Comrade Chairman, both China-DPRK relations and the Korean Peninsula situation have made positive progress. I feel happy about it," Xi said.

5b315d50637a4077985bc8f184c51e77.jpg

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Democratic People's Republic of Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Dalian, Liaoning Province, May 8, 2018. /Xinhua Photo

Xi said he was willing to meet Kim again to make joint efforts to push the healthy and stable development of China-DPRK relations, realize long-lasting peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, and promote regional peace, stability and prosperity.

For his part, Kim said both the DPRK-China friendship and the Korean Peninsula situation have undergone meaningful progress since March this year. "These are the positive outcomes of the historic meeting between me and Comrade General Secretary," he said.

At a crucial time when the regional situation is developing rapidly, Kim said he came to China again to meet with General Secretary and inform him of the situation, hoping to strengthen strategic communication and cooperation with China, deepen DPRK-China friendship, and promote regional peace and stability.

Xi also extended sincere gratitude to Kim for his great attention and earnest attitude demonstrated after a major road accident in the DPRK that resulted in casualties from the two countries.

Wang Huning, member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee, attended related activities.

***

China is at the helm. President Xi is on the watch. The DPRK will open up and grow China-style. Good news for regional peace and development.
 
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Opinion: China is integral to shrinking US-DPRK trust deficit

By Wang Xiaonan
2018-05-08


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The unannounced visit came barely 40 days after their first meeting in Beijing and less than a week after Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi's Pyongyang trip.

Such frequent interactions between China and the DPRK indicate Beijing's significance in mediating peninsular peace during this critical period.

Kim's two-day travel comes when the fate of the Korean Peninsula has once again been shrouded in gloomy uncertainty as Pyongyang warned Washington against miscalculating its "peace-loving intention" as a sign of "weakness."

A foreign ministry spokesman for the DPRK on Sunday told the Korean Central News Agency that the Donald Trump administration was misleading the public by claiming that its "maximum pressure" campaign, notably military threats and economic sanctions, was behind Pyongyang’s peace overtures.

The remarks came soon after brinkmanship seemed to be veering off the Korean Peninsula given a whirlwind of thawing diplomatic activities over the past five months.

The fast-changing dynamics on the Peninsula, which had been subjected to a decades-long stalemate, amazed the world. However, the latest rhetoric from Pyongyang has cast a shadow on the much-anticipated summit between Trump and Kim.

The move is actually a full-fledged demonstration of the trust deficit between Washington and Pyongyang.

Days ago, Trump's new top diplomat Mike Pompeo deliberately changed the terminology of "complete, verifiable, irreversible dismantling" (CVID) of the DPRK's nuclear weapons to the expression of "permanent, verifiable, irreversible dismantling" (PVID).

Meanwhile, Trump made a subtle alteration from "denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula" to "denuclearization of the DPRK." Such changes might have drawn the furious response from Pyongyang.

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Mike Pompeo (R), US Secretary of State, speaks after being sworn in as Mike Pence (C) and President Donald Trump listen during a ceremony at the State Department in Washington, DC, May 2, 2018. /VCG Photo

Given the new, though slight, developments, Pyongyang is anxious to take initiative and sit for talks on an equal footing with Washington for fear that the superpower and its allies are just flirting with it.

Moreover, the Washington-Seoul "Max Thunder" military drill involving eight mighty US F-22 stealth fighters will kick off on Friday.

The international community has raised concerns over whether the barbs traded between the US and the DPRK will ruin all the positives garnered on the Peninsula and hence plunge the situation "back to square one," as the DPRK spokesman said.

After all, the first inter-Korean summit has yielded a raft of landmark outcomes: The Republic of Korea (ROK) has started to dismantle loudspeakers along the border used to blast propaganda and music; the DPRK moved its clocks 30 minutes forward to match ROK’s time zone from Saturday on; the two Koreas agreed to set up liaison offices in each other’s capital city; and they could probably team up to participate in the Jakarta-Palembang Asian Games slated for August.

These inspiring trends have never taken place since the Korean War broke out in 1950.

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DPRK leader Kim Jong Un shakes hands with South Korean President Moon Jae-in during the inter-Korean summit at the Peace House in the village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone in South Korea, April 27, 2018. /VCG Photo

Nonetheless, it seems that a lack of trust has all along been the bottleneck obstructing the peace process on the Korean Peninsula.

For decades, the security threat in the region derives from the military pressure from the US-ROK alliance as well as DPRK's nuclear weapons development.

The greater the pressure, the more frequently Pyongyang took to nuclear and missile tests, which consequently elicited more poignant punishments from the US alliance. With tensions ever escalating, the Peninsular security scenario has fallen into a vicious cycle.

The key step in fostering trust between the stakeholders on the Korean Peninsula is the establishment of a joint security mechanism – actually the nature of a lasting peace regime, and it's nearly impossible to build the mechanism without Beijing, said Yang Xiyu, senior fellow with the China Institute of International Studies.

As early as 2014, Chinese President Xi Jinping said, "No country should seek absolute security of itself at the expense of others… We cannot just have security for one or a few countries while leaving the rest insecure."

The most pressing thing right now is to set up a security mechanism that fits every stakeholder's interests, bringing an end to the fragmented security landscape in the East Asian region.

The region's major power, China, is integral to this process.

"Beijing is expected to play a pillar role in revving up this process, by both promoting the quadrilateral talks among the two Koreas, China and the US, and reviving the long-stalled six-party talks also involving Russia and Japan," Yang, also a former diplomat engaged in Korean Peninsula issues, told CGTN.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with DPRK leader Kim Jong Un during the latter's visit to Beijing from March 25 to 28, 2018. /Xinhua Photo

The Trump administration should drop its preemptive mentality that Pyongyang has caved in to its extreme pressure.

It's also anticipated that the US president is sincere in addressing the DPRK conundrum, instead of eyeing some diplomatic gains for the mid-term election.

In the meantime, the DPRK should reassure the rest of the world that it will not repeat the history of going back on its word.

Only by building mutual trust can the stakeholders prevent the Korea Peninsula from falling into the past cycle of prolonged deadlock followed by glitters of hope and subsequent stagnation.

"It's definitely an arduous way for the peninsula to go from strategic suspension to strategic trust to strategic cooperation. China will, as always, contribute to the peace-building effort on the Korean Peninsula," said Da Zhigang, director of the Institute of Northeast Asia under Heilongjiang Provincial Academy of Social Sciences.

Peninsular peace cannot be realized overnight through Kim-Moon and Kim-Trump summits, Da added. Pyongyang's "phased denuclearization" proposal needs respect and support not only from Beijing but from all other parties involved.

Washington and Pyongyang should just stop exchanging assaults out of distrust and waiting to see what cards each other will play.
 
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I don't think North Korea will deal with Trump anymore. Trump just torpedo Iran deal.

Not a good sign. The US regime is unreliable. They do not have stable governments that would follow up on the earlier promises.

It is both difficult and risky to deal with (and do business with) that sort of regimes.

As China is now learning bitterly on the trade front as well as One-China Principle front.

The US are going genuinely neo-fascist.
 
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Chinese President Xi Jinping holds talks with DPRK leader Kim Jong Un in Dalian

CGTN
2018-05-08


Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and Chinese president, met Kim Jong Un, chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) and chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, on May 7-8.

In a cordial and friendly atmosphere, the top leaders of the two parties and the two countries had an all-round and in-depth exchange of views on China-DPRK relations and major issues of common concern.

"After the first meeting between me and Comrade Chairman, both China-DPRK relations and the Korean Peninsula situation have made positive progress. I feel happy about it," Xi said.

5b315d50637a4077985bc8f184c51e77.jpg

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Democratic People's Republic of Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Dalian, Liaoning Province, May 8, 2018. /Xinhua Photo

Xi said he was willing to meet Kim again to make joint efforts to push the healthy and stable development of China-DPRK relations, realize long-lasting peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, and promote regional peace, stability and prosperity.

For his part, Kim said both the DPRK-China friendship and the Korean Peninsula situation have undergone meaningful progress since March this year. "These are the positive outcomes of the historic meeting between me and Comrade General Secretary," he said.

At a crucial time when the regional situation is developing rapidly, Kim said he came to China again to meet with General Secretary and inform him of the situation, hoping to strengthen strategic communication and cooperation with China, deepen DPRK-China friendship, and promote regional peace and stability.

Xi also extended sincere gratitude to Kim for his great attention and earnest attitude demonstrated after a major road accident in the DPRK that resulted in casualties from the two countries.

Wang Huning, member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee, attended related activities.

***

China is at the helm. President Xi is on the watch. The DPRK will open up and grow China-style. Good news for regional peace and development.
But the Donald get nominated for Nobel Peace prize . Lol

Not a good sign. The US regime is unreliable. They do not have stable governments that would follow up on the earlier promises.

It is both difficult and risky to deal with (and do business with) that sort of regimes.

As China is now learning bitterly on the trade front as well as One-China Principle front.

The US are going genuinely neo-fascist.
CHINA still talking with US on trade lol
 
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CHINA still talking with US on trade lol

Three takes from this case:

1. The US is an unreliable party when it comes to following up on documents signed by a previous legitimate government.

2. China and the DPRK needs not to have any illusions of the US actually desiring peace in the peninsula.

3. Peace is antithetical to the US existence as a pseudo-legitimate actor in places of crisis.
 
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Three takes from this case:

1. The US is an unreliable party when it comes to following up on documents signed by a previous legitimate government.

2. China and the DPRK needs not to have any illusions of the US actually desiring peace in the peninsula.

3. Peace is antithetical to the US existence as a pseudo-legitimate actor in places of crisis.

Well said, my friend ! :coffee: @TaiShang
 
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Kim jong UN wears Chinese tunic suits.I think qingfeng should wear the same clothes.As the Chinese leader and the communist predecessor.
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Just a frozen image of a whole gesture. I guess it speaks of seniority (which is part of East Asian culture) than anything else. I am in favor of equal and deep relations.

China's diplomacy has done wonders in leading DPRK's opening up process, so, the appreciation is understandable.

Dotard regime has yet to come up with anything tangible other than threats to dynamite the progress made so far.
 
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Just a frozen image of a whole gesture. I guess it speaks of seniority (which is part of East Asian culture) than anything else. I am in favor of equal and deep relations.

China's diplomacy has done wonders in leading DPRK's opening up process, so, the appreciation is understandable.

Dotard regime has yet to come up with anything tangible other than threats to dynamite the progress made so far.
Look at the bottom right of the picture. Unfortunately, I couldn't make the logo larger.
 
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