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World News Updated Jun 9, 2026

South Korea Reaffirms Commitment to Denuclearizing Korean Peninsula After Kim-Xi Summit

South Korea has reaffirmed its goal of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula following a summit between Kim Jong-un and Xi Jinping that did not mention nuclear issues. The foreign ministry spokesperson Park Il emphasized that denuclearization remains a consistent goal of the international community. South Korea is closely watching China's call for expanded military cooperation with North Korea. The absence of nuclear discussion in the summit may indicate behind-closed-doors talks.

South Korea reaffirms goal of denuclearising Korean Peninsula following Kim-Xi summit

Seoul, June 9

The South Korean foreign ministry on Tuesday reaffirmed its goal of denuclearising North Korea, following a summit between the leaders of Pyongyang and Beijing in which the subject apparently was not discussed.

In their summit held Monday in Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to expand cooperation in various fields, according to Pyongyang's state media. Notably absent, however, was any mention of nuclear issues or the broader situation on the Korean Peninsula.

During a regular press briefing in Seoul, foreign ministry spokesperson Park Il highlighted that the denuclearisation of North Korea "remains a consistent goal of the international community," Yonhap News Agency reported.

"Our government will continue to uphold the goal of denuclearising the Korean Peninsula without wavering," Park said.

He emphasised that China has repeatedly reaffirmed that its position on issues concerning the Korean Peninsula remains unchanged.

"We also note that the United States and China confirmed during their summit last month that the denuclearisation of North Korea is a shared objective," the spokesperson added.

Park expressed hopes that exchanges and cooperation between the North and China, including Xi's latest visit to Pyongyang, will "contribute to peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula."

Meanwhile, South Korea's unification ministry on Tuesday flagged Chinese President Xi Jinping's call for expanded military cooperation between Beijing and Pyongyang as something worth watching closely.

"It was the first known case in which the subject has been raised publicly," a ministry official said, adding Seoul was monitoring the situation for any developments.

At Monday's summit between Xi and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, Xi said China remained firmly committed to protecting North Korea's interests and expanding practical cooperation across a broad range of areas, including the economy, trade, military, science and healthcare, according to China's Xinhua News Agency.

North Korea's media made no mention of military cooperation.

The official also noted Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun had accompanied Xi, unlike the Chinese leader's 2019 visit to Pyongyang, when the defence minister was not part of the Chinese delegation. The inclusion this time, the official suggested, may signal Beijing's intentions.

On the absence of any reference to North Korea's nuclear programs or the Korean Peninsula situation, the official struck a cautious tone, saying it was too early to draw conclusions.

The official noted that such issues may have been discussed behind closed doors and simply not made public.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Interesting that Chinese defence minister accompanied Xi this time - that's a clear signal. North Korea expanding military cooperation with China while pretending nuclear issues don't exist. South Korea is right to be cautious but this is just how geopolitics works in our neighbourhood.

Vikram M

The silence on nuclear issues is deafening. China playing both sides - talking denuclearisation with US and expanding military ties with North Korea. Reminds me of how some powers operate in South Asia. South Korea's patience is admirable but unrealistic.

Rohit P

Why do we always expect transparency from these summits? Every country protects its interests. China wants stability on its border, North Korea wants survival, South Korea wants security. Our own foreign policy should focus on keeping India's options open, not getting dragged into anyone's narrative.

Kavya N

South Korea is right to keep pushing for denuclearisation - that's the only sustainable path. But expecting China to pressure North Korea while expanding military ties is optimistic. The defence minister accompanying Xi is a worrying signal. India should watch this closely given China's tactics elsewhere.

Michael C

I'm from Australia but living in India now - this reminds me of how complex Asian geopolitics is. South Korea's position is understandable but they're caught between US alliance and Chinese economic ties. Denuclearisation might be a distant dream if North Korea sees nukes as their only guarantee.

S We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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