Personnel reforms such as the Director of the National Security Office of Korea and the Director of the National Intelligence Service Are you aware of North Korea? July 3: 18:55

The Korean Presidential Office has announced personnel changes to renovate the director of the National Security Office, which will be the commander of foreign affairs and security, and the director of the National Intelligence Service, which is the top intelligence agency. It is believed that it has the aim of clarifying the stance of rebuilding the North-South relations by solidifying it with human resources who are closely related to North Korea.

According to a statement released by the Korean presidential office on the 3rd, the head of the National Security Office, which is the commander of foreign affairs and security, is Chung Woo-young, who has been working for more than three years since the inauguration of the Moon Jae-in administration. It is said that Seo Hun (Xu Kaoru), the director of the National Intelligence Service, will be appointed instead of Mr.

Mr. Seo, who is familiar with the situation in North Korea, attended the North-South summit meeting with his father, and was dispatched to Pyongyang in advance as a special envoy for the president.

In addition, Mr. Park Ji-won (Park Ji-yuan), who was an aide of former President Kim Dae-Jung (Kim Dae-Jung), will be appointed as the succeeding director of the National Intelligence Service.

Park is known to have contributed to the realization of the first ever North-South summit in 2000, and Kim Jong-un (Kim Jong-un) came to convey his condolences when his former president's wife died last June. I am meeting with the Korean Labor Party chairman, Kim Yo-jeong (Kim Yo-sung), at Panmunjom (Panmun store).

Furthermore, in addition to Chung who retires from the National Security Office, Lim Jong Suk, who has exchanged with Kim Yo-jeong as an aide of President Moon, is a special aide to advise the president on diplomacy and security. In addition to the former secretary general, the ruling party's heavy minister, Lee In-young, has been appointed as the unification minister who controls the North-South relations.

The Mun administration, whose remaining term of office is less than two years, accepts that it intends to clarify the attitude of aiming to revive the North-South relations by solidifying high-ranking officials responsible for foreign affairs and security with human resources closely related to North Korea. It is being done.

* Is the date under analysis