President Xi Jinping(L)

South Korea is pushing to resume long-suspended security consultations with Japan later this year to discuss North Korea and regional security issues, Yonhap News Agency reported Tuesday, citing a government source.
"Our basic stance is that we will cooperate with Japan in areas that need cooperation. We will have to handle tasks that have been long delayed, including holding a security policy consultation within this year," a senior Seoul government source was quoted as saying.
The security consultations, involving senior foreign affairs and defense officials, were held regularly under an agreement signed between the two countries in 1997, but have been suspended since 2009 due to tensions over historical and territorial issues.
The Asian neighbors had sought the security meeting last year, but the plan fell through after Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's controversial war shrine visit drew an angry response from South Korea.
Japan's review of the 1993 Kono statement, which apologized for Japan's sexual enslavement of Korean women during World War II, also sparked a strong backlash. Japan colonized Korea from 1910-1945.
The two nations will likely discuss stepping up cooperation to deter North Korea's nuclear and missile threats and Japan's controversial move to revise its pacifist constitution to bolster military activities, the report added. (end) mk.tg