President Lee Jae Myung urges patience in building trust with North Korea

by Park Sae-jin Posted : February 26, 2026, 15:53Updated : February 26, 2026, 15:53
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung speaks during a meeting with senior secretaries at the presidential Blue House on Feb 26 YONHAP
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung speaks during a meeting with senior secretaries at the presidential Blue House on Feb. 26. YONHAP


SEOUL, February 26 (AJP) - South Korean President Lee Jae Myung stated Thursday that long-standing hostility between the two Koreas cannot be erased with a single measure, responding to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's speech from a day ago, which characterized Seoul's outreach as a "deception."

During a meeting with senior secretaries at the presidential office, President Lee addressed Kim's report at the 9th Congress of the Workers' Party, in which the North Korean leader ruled out further dialogue. President Lee emphasized that trust must be built gradually through persistent effort, eventually leading to a state of mutual understanding and empathy.

"Hostile feelings and a mindset of confrontation that have accumulated over a long time cannot be eliminated in an instant through one breakthrough measure," President Lee said.

The president's remarks come at a time of deep division within South Korean politics regarding North Korea's policy. While critics have labeled the administration's conciliatory tone as a submissive stance, President Lee argued that the country must move past a history that "rushed toward confrontation and war." He questioned whether previous "insulting or threatening acts" toward the North had effectively protected national interests or state security.

President Lee's push for engagement follows a significant deterioration in inter-Korean ties during the previous administration of President Yoon Suk Yeol. Under the Yoon government, the 2018 Comprehensive Military Agreement was suspended, and Pyongyang officially designated South Korea as its "primary foe." President Lee, who assumed office in 2025, has attempted to pivot back toward the de-escalation strategies seen during the Moon Jae-in era, though Pyongyang has so far remained unreceptive.

President Lee noted that the process of reconciliation would not be immediate, citing a Korean proverb that one cannot be full with the first spoonful of rice. He stressed that the administration would focus on its own efforts to build trust rather than blaming the other side for the current stalemate.

The administration remains committed to seeking communication and cooperation to establish what President Lee described as "structural peace and stability" on the Korean Peninsula. President Lee concluded that consistent effort is the only way to overcome the "hostile two-state" doctrine recently codified by the North.