HomeAmericaUS, South Korea discuss nuclear cooperation in security talks

US, South Korea discuss nuclear cooperation in security talks

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By Joyce Lee

SEOUL, June 3 (Reuters) - ‌South Korea and the U.S. held inaugural talks this week ​to discuss nuclear cooperation under a joint fact sheet on security agreed by U.S. President Donald Trump and ⁠South Korean leader Lee Jae Myung last year, Seoul said on Wednesday.

The talks, held on Tuesday and Wednesday, were due to cover Seoul's push for expanded uranium enrichment and ​spent-fuel reprocessing rights to support its plan to build nuclear-powered submarines, South Korea's Foreign Ministry said previously.

South Korea's ‌delegation was led by First Vice Foreign Minister Park Yoon-joo, while the U.S. side was headed by Allison Hooker, the State Department's under secretary for political affairs, the ministry said.

The meeting ⁠agenda included both "the issue of expanding enrichment and reprocessing rights" and "the issue ⁠of nuclear-powered submarines," ministry spokesperson Park Il told a briefing on Tuesday.

Park said discussions on enrichment and reprocessing were tied to revising the existing nuclear agreement and were "purely for civilian and commercial purposes."

By contrast, nuclear-powered submarines would require a separate track since they involve military ‌use of nuclear material, he said.

"Because nuclear-powered submarines are related to the military use ⁠of nuclear energy, a separate agreement will be needed under ‌U.S. energy law," Park said.

The two countries agreed to work ​toward producing substantive results as soon as possible, establish a framework to review progress during the year, and accelerate future consultations, the ministry said on Wednesday.

The U.S.-South Korea joint ‌fact sheet issued in November said Washington supported a process ​that could lead to South Korea's ⁠civil uranium enrichment and spent-fuel reprocessing for peaceful uses.

It also said the ‌United States had approved South Korea building nuclear-powered ⁠attack submarines and would work with Seoul on requirements, including fuel sourcing.

South Korea aims to launch its first nuclear-powered submarine by the mid-2030s, using low-enriched uranium fuel and building the ​vessel domestically, Defence Minister Ahn ‌Gyu-back said last month.

Under the current nuclear agreement between the countries, South Korea is not allowed ⁠to reprocess spent nuclear fuel, or to ​enrich uranium for military purposes, even though it possesses nuclear reactors to generate ​power.

(Reporting by Joyce LeeEditing by Ed Davies)

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