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Kishida, whose nation has no formal diplomatic ties with Pyongyang, has said he was exploring possibilities to meet North Korea’s leader to resolve the matter of Japanese civilians abducted in the 1970s and 1980s.
Kim Yo-jong, a deputy department director in the ruling Workers’ Party, said Kishida’s comments could be considered positive if meant to advance relations.
“If Japan … makes a political decision to open a new path for improving ties based on mutual respect and respectful behaviour, it is my view that the two countries can open a new future,” she was quoted as saying.
Japan has been critical of North Korea’s pursuit of ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons, often drawing harsh rebukes from Pyongyang, especially as Tokyo stepped up its security alliance with South Korea and the US.
Kim added her view was a personal observation and, as far as she knew, the North’s leadership had no specific plans for its relations with Japan or to make contact with Tokyo, KCNA said.
Kim is widely considered the closest confidant and adviser to her brother on external policy matters.
US senior official for North Korea Jung Pak told reporters Washington supports any diplomacy with Kim’s government, which has not responded to repeated US offers to engage in talks without preconditions since President Joe Biden took office in 2021.
“They’ve shut their borders since January 2020 and we support… any diplomacy there,” Pak said in a briefing at the state department.
“Any kind of diplomacy that DPRK does, that’s not Russia, is a positive thing,” she said in a reference to Pyongyang’s growing cooperation with Moscow that has alarmed Washington.
Another US official has said Washington wanted Japan to ensure it had “smoothed over” a possible meeting between Kim and Kishida with South Korea. The US has worked to develop three-way coordination of policy on North Korea and other security issues between itself, Japan and South Korea.
Pak said she could not say whether North Korea’s willingness to speak to Japan could be linked to Seoul’s recent move to establish diplomatic ties with the North’s longtime ally Cuba, but added: “I think Pyongyang has always been interested in driving a wedge in our relationships or in the relationships between Japan and other countries and Korea and other countries.”
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