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Deputy Secretary Sherman, US and China coordinate access to DPRK, South Korea ‘quarantined’

김종찬안보 2021. 7. 23. 13:45
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The new U.S. State Department's new policy toward North Korea has revealed a method of tying the Moon Jae-in system of arms augmentation into a triangular alliance between South Korea, the US and Japan, coordinating North Korea policy with China and “coordination” with South Korea.

 

The Biden administration seems to have adopted direct negotiations with China after the Trump regime and the Moon Jae-in administration, which led the top-ranking arms increase, collided with the disarmament of denuclearization through a power-based peace strategy and North Korea directly denounced it.

Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Wendy Sherman visited Korea on a tour of Asahi before holding the Tianjin summit near the Korean Peninsula with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on the 25th. ) will underline the importance of coordination between the United States and South Korea in our approach to

Deputy Secretary Sherman said in a meeting with South Korea that day, she formalized the international name DPRK for North Korea, unlike the Republican Trump regime's NK, and gave the final notice to "coordination with South Korea's approach to North Korea."

Deputy Secretary of State Sherman said in her deputy ministerial meeting open remarks that "the alliance between the United States and South Korea is a lynch pin for peace, security and prosperity not only in the Indo-Pacific, but also around the world," she said.

 

Deputy Secretary Sherman previously said at the Blue House that President Moon said, “I hope that Deputy Secretary Sherman will make an active effort to resume dialogue between the United States and the United States.” separated the conversation.

At a regular briefing on the 21st, Spokesperson Ned Price said, "There will be elements in which our interests coincide." When asked if Deputy Secretary Wendy Sherman would request cooperation from the Chinese side on the North Korean issue during her visit to China. If it does, we will explore the possibility of cooperation.”

“We had conversations with China regarding North Korea (DPRK),” Price said at a briefing on the same day. This March launch was announced.

 

After meeting with President Moon in South Korea in March, Secretary of State Blincoln had a two-day meeting with Chinese Politburo Yang Jiechi in Anchorage, Alaska, on the 18th, and the U.S. said, "Chinese actions in Xinjiang, Hong Kong, Taiwan, It criticized “economic coercion on U.S. allies,” and China responded with “a warning to stop U.S. interference in internal affairs,” and that “the U.S. should stop changing its image and pushing its own democracy to the rest of the world.” was revealed

"The purpose of the trilateral talks was not to send a message to North Korea, but to strengthen the trilateral relationship," State Department spokesperson Price said on the 21st of the Tokyo US-Korea-Japan Vice Foreign Ministers' Conference. The trilateral relationship is based on our common security and interest in safeguarding freedom and democracy, advocating human rights and women's rights, responding to climate change, promoting regional and international peace and security, and strengthening law and order based on international order in the Indo-Pacific region. It is very important.”

 

The US-China high-level meeting in Anchorage was attended by US security advisers and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

 

The Moon Jae-in administration approached the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula from the Reagan regime's hard-line conservative policy as a strategy for power-based peace by the Trump Republican regime's arms increase and a strategy to expand supply advantage by expanding the debt economy.

After a strategic dialogue with Vice Minister Choi on the 23rd, Deputy Minister Sherman said in an interview with the JoongAng Ilbo that "if sanctions are to be eased, the journey to denuclearization must begin," and "North Korea must agree to dialogue with the United States."

The Trump regime and the Moon Jae-in administration simultaneously approached “denuclearization and dialogue,” and used sanctions relief as a strategy to pressure dialogue.

 

Unification Minister Lee In-young met with Deputy Minister Sherman on the 22nd, pointing out the US sanctions against North Korea as an obstacle to inter-Korean dialogue and demanding relief, and Sherman separated from denuclearization by "supporting inter-Korean dialogue".