(2nd LD) S. Korean prime minister nominee offers conditional talks with N. Korea
(ATTN: UPDATES with planned session of U.N. Security Council)
SEOUL, May 23 (Yonhap) -- The nominee for South Korean prime minister on Tuesday offered conditional talks with North Korea as the U.N. Security Council is prepared to hold a session on how to deal with Pyongyang's latest missile launch.
Lee Nak-yon said North Korea should freeze its nuclear program before coming back to the negotiating table.
South and North Korea can "hold a dialogue if there is a shift in North Korea's attitude or under the right circumstances," Lee said in written comments to the parliament for his confirmation hearing set to begin on Wednesday. The two Koreas last held high-level talks in 2015.
Tensions have spiked on the Korean Peninsula in recent years over North Korea's missile and nuclear programs. On Sunday, the North test-fired a ballistic missile -- the latest in a series of provocations -- drawing fresh condemnation from the U.N. Security Council.
In New York, the council is set to hold a session on Tuesday on how to deal with the latest missile launch.
North Korea is already under the toughest U.N. sanctions ever over its repeated nuclear tests and its long-range rocket launches.
U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said "all options are on the table" as she warned "we don't want to start a fight, so don't give us a reason to have one," according to an interview with NBC on Monday.
Lee also called for stern retaliation if provoked, and said South Korea should use all means available, including sanctions and dialogue, to bring about North Korea's denuclearization.
North Korea agreed to freeze and eventually dismantle its plutonium-based bomb program in return for economic rewards under the Geneva accord in 1994.
The deal collapsed in 2002 when the U.S. accused North Korea of running a secret uranium nuclear program, sparking the latest nuclear crisis.
North Korea has since carried out five nuclear tests and dozens of missile tests as it seeks to develop a nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile capable of hitting the United States.
Despite sanctions and pressure, North Korea has repeatedly vowed to further develop its missile and nuclear weapons program, viewing it as a deterrent against what it claims is Washington's hostile policy against it.
In Jakarta, South Korea's special envoy Park Won-soon sought help from Indonesia in resolving the North Korean nuclear crisis as he met with Indonesia President Joko Widodo.
Widodo said he hopes that North Korean issues can be resolved through dialogue.
In a fresh sign of tension, South Korean troops fired warning shots at an "unidentified object" flying across the heavily fortified border from North Korea Tuesday afternoon.
South Korea's military detected the object traversing the Military Demarcation Line southward in the Chorwon area in the eastern province of Gangwon at around 4 p.m., according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
A defense source said the military fired more than 90 K-3 machine gun rounds, adding it may have been a drone.
In January last year, a North Korean drone flew over the MDL into the western section of the demilitarized zone that separates South and North Korea. The South opened machine gun fire on it.
entropy@yna.co.kr
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