Amid escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol proposed setting up a working-level consultative body with North Korea. Announced on Thursday, the initiative aims to explore methods to reduce hostilities between the two Koreas and explore opportunities for renewed economic collaboration.
During a speech commemorating the end of Japanese colonial rule over the Korean Peninsula in 1945, Yoon extended an offer of aid, dialogue, and a roadmap toward reunification with North Korea. He emphasized that unification remains an “unfinished task” and expressed his plans to pursue it based on principles of freedom, as reported by Bloomberg.
President Yoon’s remarks were delivered during the 2024 National Liberation Day event, marking the 79th anniversary of Korea’s independence from Japanese colonial rule, which lasted from 1910 to 1945. In his address, Yoon expressed his willingness to initiate political and economic cooperation if North Korea takes “just one step” towards denuclearization, as reported by Yonhap.
This appeal comes weeks after South Korea’s offer to provide humanitarian aid for flood damage in North Korea, which the North subsequently rejected. Prospects for reconciliation between the two Koreas appear grim, as relations have deteriorated to their lowest point in a decade.
The North has accelerated its nuclear and missile development while taking measures to sever ties with the South. Earlier this year, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un described South Korea as a “primary foe” and dismissed any possibility of peaceful unification.
In his speech, Yoon suggested that forming an “inter-Korean working group” could help ease the strained relationship between the two countries. He proposed that this platform could facilitate discussions on various issues, from economic cooperation and cultural exchanges to reunions of families divided by the Korean War of 1950-53. Yoon emphasized that “dialogue and cooperation can bring about substantive progress in inter-Korean relations.”
Yoon also proposed launching an international conference focused on North Korea’s human rights situation to raise global awareness. He argued that if more North Koreans realized that unification through freedom could improve their lives, they might become allies in pursuing a unified Korea. However, North Korea’s leadership has recently removed the concept of peaceful unification from its national policy, further complicating any efforts for future dialogue.
President Yoon’s speech also came amid criticism from opposition lawmakers over his decision to appoint a former professor, whom they labeled a “pro-Japan revisionist,” to head a national independence museum. Some lawmakers expressed discomfort with South Korea’s strengthening ties with Japan, further escalating tensions. In protest, several major independence movement groups, which had traditionally co-hosted the annual National Liberation Day events with the government, held a separate ceremony for the first time, attended by key opposition leaders.
Responding to the backlash regarding the controversial appointment, Yoon’s office acknowledged “misunderstandings” and indicated efforts to address the concerns. The administration seems intent on balancing its diplomatic stance while managing internal disagreements over historical narratives and current foreign policy.