Jeong Yeon-doo, vice foreign minister for strategy and intelligence, speaks during a meeting with Korean correspondents at the Korean Embassy in Washington D.C., Feb. 26. Yonhap
WASHINGTON — A senior South Korean diplomat said Friday that Seoul and Washington are making efforts toward "normalization," amid reports that the U.S. has partially limited its sharing of intelligence on North Korea in response to what it sees as a classified information leak by a top Seoul official.
Vice Foreign Minister for Strategy and Intelligence Jeong Yeon-doo made the remarks after his meeting with U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Allison Hooker at the State Department in Washington, amid concerns that the reported curbs on the sharing of intelligence could affect security cooperation between the allies.
"That is what we are trying to do. Both sides are making (efforts)," he said when asked by Yonhap News Agency if things are moving toward "normalization."
Asked if misunderstandings between Seoul and Washington have been addressed, Jeong said, "We had discussed (issues), including that. Let's wait and see."
Reports have said that the U.S. partially restricted South Korea's access to its satellite intelligence on North Korea after Unification Minister Chung Dong-young referred to the North's Kusong area as one of the sites that host uranium enrichment facilities.
Seoul believes that Chung's reference to the Kusong site is based on "open-source" information, while the U.S. side regards it as a disclosure of confidential information.
Given that both Jeong and Hooker are well versed in North Korean issues, the two sides were expected to have in-depth discussions over the matter.
Jeong was in the U.S. to attend a meeting of state parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons at U.N. headquarters in New York early next week.
On the controversy in Seoul, a senior Trump administration official said that the U.S. government "expects all our partners to safeguard sensitive U.S. information that has been shared in private channels."
Source: Korea Times News