City
Epaper

South Korea sets up task forces for working-level talks with US on nuclear subs, uranium rights

By IANS | Updated: December 7, 2025 14:00 IST

Seoul, Dec 7 The South Korean presidential office said Sunday it has established task force teams to support ...

Open in App

Seoul, Dec 7 The South Korean presidential office said Sunday it has established task force teams to support South Korea's working-level negotiations with the United States on nuclear-powered submarines, uranium enrichment and South Korea's share of defence costs.

Deputy National Security Adviser Kim Hyun-jong said the Office of National Security has been drawing up a road map for follow-up measures to the security agreements reached during summit meetings between South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and US President Donald Trump.

"We are working on a road map for consultations with the United States," Kim said during a press briefing. "Working-level discussions have been under way since this month, and we expect to see feasible outcomes in the first half of next year," Yonhap News Agency reported.

Kim said relevant ministries will lead the consultations, while the presidential task forces will provide support.

The move comes as Seoul and Washington are seeking to modernize their alliance by increasing South Korea's role in its own defence and strengthening joint responses to regional threats, including challenges posed by China.

Following his summit with Lee in Gyeongju during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, Trump said he had approved Seoul's plan to build nuclear-powered submarines, a move that will require follow-up negotiations on shipyard and fuel arrangements.

The two countries are also negotiating expanded rights for Seoul to enrich uranium and reprocess spent nuclear fuel, areas currently restricted under a bilateral accord.

During a press conference earlier this week, Lee said Trump had proposed that the two countries form a 5:5 partnership to achieve South Korea's aim of enriching uranium and reprocessing spent nuclear fuel on its soil.

South Korea's pledge to raise its defence spending to 3.5 per cent of its gross domestic product was formalized in a joint fact sheet issued last month after the two countries reached trade and security agreements.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsISSF World Cup Final 2025: Simranpreet Kaur bags gold medal; Manu Bhaker ends campaign without medal

NationalUP: House Set on Fire in Gonda Over Land Dispute, Police Launch Probe

BusinessRBI may opt for more rate cuts if global challenges hit domestic growth: CareEdge Report

InternationalTaiwan records 4 PLA aircraft sorties, 7 PLAN vessels around its territory

CricketDane Van Niekerk's cameo, Faye Tunnicliffe's fifty help South Africa take unbeatable 2-0 lead against Ireland

International Realted Stories

InternationalThailand Launches Air Strikes Along Disputed Border With Cambodia

InternationalNDAA 2026 sharpens US hard line on China, expands major Taiwan push

InternationalIndia's outreach to Russia driven by China threat, says analyst

InternationalTrump flags antitrust risks in Netflix–Warner mega-merger

InternationalUS Congress unveils compromise fiscal 2026 defense bill