SEOUL (Reuters) -Senior South Korean diplomats held talks with Chinese counterparts on Thursday after a diplomatic spat with Taiwan over Seoul’s cancellation of an invitation to a senior Taipei official to take part in a business forum last week.
Vice Foreign Minister Choi Jong-kun and aides conducted an online meeting on Thursday with a team led by Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng, the first such talks since June 2017.
The sides discussed efforts to reopen stalled denuclearisation talks with North Korea, as well as Beijing’s preparations to host the 2022 Winter Olympics in February, Yonhap news agency reported, citing South Korea’s foreign ministry.
Choi reiterated that Seoul hopes the Olympics will be successful, the ministry said, without elaborating on any discussions of attendance by South Korean officials.
South Korea’s presidential Blue House has said it is not considering participating in a U.S.-led diplomatic boycott https://www.reuters.com/world/china/australia-joins-diplomatic-boycott-beijing-winter-games-2021-12-08 of the Beijing Olympics, but that discussions had yet to be held with China on sending a delegation.
Seoul faces an increasingly thorny balancing act https://www.reuters.com/world/china/china-looms-large-skorea-presidential-hopefuls-meet-us-diplomat-2021-11-10 as the United States, its top ally, focuses on marshalling allies and partners to counter what it calls a coercive and aggressive China, South Korea’s largest economic partner.
“We hope this meeting can have a positive effect on enhancing communication and mutual trust and the promotion of bilateral relations,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a regular press briefing ahead of the talks on Thursday.
The meeting came at a delicate time as Taiwan has lodged a protest over South Korea’s revocation of its invitation sent in September for Digital Minister Audrey Tang to speak virtually at a conference last week in Seoul.
China claims the democratically governed island of Taiwan as its own territory and has sought to isolate it diplomatically abroad, stepping up pressure to assert its sovereignty claims.
Taipei’s foreign ministry called South Korea’s cancellation of Tang’s visit “rude” and summoned South Korea’s acting de facto ambassador to express its displeasure.
An official at Seoul’s presidential Blue House said on Wednesday that the meeting organisers cancelled the invitation in line with “our diplomatic principles, not because of China”.
“Our position remains unchanged that we will continue promoting unofficial economic and cultural relations (with Taiwan), and practical exchanges through them,” the official told reporters.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin with additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Taipei and Yew Lun Tian in Beijing; Editing by Clarence Fernandez, Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Mark Heinrich)