Monday, August 15, 2011

SKorean president calls for cooperation with North

South Koreans fly national flags in celebration to mark Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

South Koreans fly national flags in celebration to mark Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A girl puts national flag over her head during a celebration to mark liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

South Koreans wave their national flags to celebrate the Liberation Day from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

South Koreans wave their national flags to celebrate the Liberation Day from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A relative, front right, of a resistance fighter who fought for national independence against Japanese colonial rule during the World War II, is detained by security officers after she shouted slogans while South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, not seen in the photo, was speaking during a ceremony to celebrate Korean Liberation Day from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Aug. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Lee Jae-won, Pool)

(AP) ? South Korea's president called Monday for cooperation with rival North Korea and pledged limited humanitarian support for suffering North Koreans as the two nations try to set aside animosity and pursue dialogue.

Lee Myung-bak's speech celebrating the Korean peninsula's liberation from Japan's 1910-1945 colonial rule follows tentative diplomatic talks among officials from the United States, North Korea and South Korea meant to restart international negotiations to persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons ambitions.

Lee, wearing a metallic-brown-colored traditional hanbok, said Koreans long for reunification, despite the bitter history of the peninsula. Although known as a hard-liner on North Korea, Lee has often looked to strike a balance between diplomacy and strength, offering dialogue for any signs of North Korean goodwill.

Both the totalitarian North and democratic South Korea champion the idea of reunification, but each sees its own system of government as the leading force in any single Korea.

"South and North Korea have lived in an age of confrontation for the last 60 years," Lee said in the nationally televised speech. "Now we must leap beyond that age and live in an age of peace and cooperation."

Korea was divided after the end of Japanese rule and technically remains in a state of war because the 1950s Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

Despite the president's conciliatory tone and recent signs that nuclear talks stalled since 2008 could resume, tensions between Seoul and Pyongyang remain high. U.S. and South Korean forces begin joint military drills this week, and South Korea says it exchanged artillery fire with the North last week along their disputed maritime dividing line. North Korea says the South overreacted to construction noise.

Last year was a bloody reminder of the animosity between the Koreas. Seoul says a North Korean torpedo sank one of its warships in March 2010, killing 46 sailors; a North Korean artillery attack in November killed two civilians and two marines on a front-line South Korean island.

Lee also said in his speech that humanitarian support for children and victims of natural disasters will continue. North Korea has faced weeks of torrential rain, leading to widespread death and property loss.

Since taking office in 2008, Lee has halted large-scale food aid to North Korea pending nuclear disarmament progress. But his conservative government has provided occasional aid to vulnerable children, pregnant women and disaster victims.

Recent weeks have seen renewed diplomatic hope. A senior North Korean official met last month with his U.S. counterparts in New York to negotiate ways to restart nuclear talks. That meeting followed friendly talks between North and South Korean nuclear envoys during a regional security forum in Indonesia.

South Korean leaders often call for a peaceful reunification with the North, although many in Seoul are wary of the huge social and economic costs associated with absorbing the impoverished North. North Korea also has called repeatedly for reunification, but it imagines integration under its own totalitarian political system.

Tensions could flare again. Allies South Korea and the United States plan to begin more than a week of drills starting Tuesday that simulate a military crisis with the North. North Korea has urged the cancellation of the annual exercises, calling them a hindrance to diplomacy.

Meanwhile, on the South Korean side of the heavily armed border, conductor Daniel Barenboim, known for his Middle East peacemaking efforts, planned Monday to lead an orchestra of young musicians from Israel and Arab countries in an outdoor "Peace Concert" featuring Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-08-15-AS-Koreas-Tension/id-e818dd3aaf144257ae1fb73c0b114013

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