Open Letter to President Donald J. Trump: Ending the Korean War

January 29, 2025 


The Honorable Donald Trump 

President of the United States 

The White House 

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 

NW Washington, DC 20500 


Dear President Trump, 

The undersigned coalition of national organizations write to urge you as you take office to pursue a diplomatic, peace-first approach with North Korea focused on improving relations, ending the Korean War, and reducing nuclear risk. As groups working together to establish a just peace on the Korean Peninsula through engagement, trustbuilding, peacebuilding, reconciliation, and dialogue, we hope you will dedicate urgent attention to this critical issue. 

We encourage you to continue on the progress you made in your first administration toward improving relations with North Korea. Years of multiple administrations’ policies have not only failed to meet their stated goal of denuclearization, but have resulted in worsening tensions and an increased threat of war on the Korean Peninsula. We believe your administration has a unique opportunity to pursue a new approach that prioritizes peace in ways that would meaningfully advance US-North Korean relations and reduce nuclear risk where decades of pressure have failed. 

In fact, there are growing voices in Congress that recognize the importance of a peace-based approach with North Korea. In the 118th Congress, the Peace on the Korean Peninsula Act (H.R. 1369), which calls for the State Department to outline a clear roadmap to peace, garnered a record 53 cosponsors on both sides of the aisle. 

We strongly urge you to focus on the hard work of sustained diplomacy with North Korea and commit to the following principles: 

End the Korean War. Even though active hostilities between the United States and North Korea ended in 1953 with an Armistice Agreement, there was never a formal end to the war with a peace agreement. This continued state of war is the root cause of militarism and tensions that must be resolved if there is to be real progress with North Korea. A peace agreement that ends the wartime status quo would reduce tensions and foster more effective engagement on critical issues such as improved human rights and denuclearization. Formally ending the Korean War is the foundational trust-building mechanism in achieving a durable peace and would remove North Korea's stated justification for nuclear weapons. 

Agree to a gradual, reciprocal, verifiable process. The United States cannot realistically expect North Korea to unilaterally disarm before providing any sanctions relief, security guarantees, or other incentives. We urge you to reject calls to pursue a maximalist “all or nothing” approach and instead focus on actions that can move us towards advancing peace and denuclearization. 

Normalize relations by building confidence and reducing tensions. There are many steps that the administration can take to shore up the potential for a successful diplomatic process. These steps include, but are not limited to: 

Reaffirming past commitments, including those most recently made in the 2018 Singapore Joint Declaration, which constructively called for new relations based on peaceful coexistence and the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula 

Lifting the travel ban, which prevents US passport holders from entering North Korea, to facilitate people-to-people exchanges, reunions of divided families, and access for humanitarian organizations 

Expanding sanctions exemptions for humanitarian activities and access, such as the repatriation of the remains of US service members and people-to-people exchanges, as well as lifting sectoral sanctions that harm vulnerable individuals 

Suspending large-scale and live-fire military exercises, as research shows that joint military exercises do not deter North Korea but rather provoke a cycle of tit-for-tat provocative rhetoric and actions 

Establishing reciprocal liaison offices to aid in the pursuit of diplomatic talks and facilitate retrieval of U.S. Korean War servicemen’s remains and Korean-American family reunions 

Refraining from actions that constrict or complicate diplomacy, such as deploying additional missile defenses, enacting sanctions that impede talks and confidence building, employing hostile rhetoric, or rejecting leader-to-leader engagement 

We urge you to take steps now to help formally end the Korean War with a peace agreement, which would lead to greater peace and security for the Korean Peninsula and the whole region. Thank you for your consideration, and we look forward to hearing from you. 

Sincerely, 

Action One Korea 

American Friends Service Committee 

Blasian March 

Catholic Workers 

Coalition of Koreans in America

Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy 

Dorothy Day House, Washington, DC 

Good Friends USA

JTS America 

Kings Bay Plowshares 

Korea Peace Now 

Grassroots Network Korean American 

National Coordinating Council Inc. 

Korean American Peace Fund 

Korean American Support Association for Prisoners of Conscience 

Legacies of War Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns 

Massachusetts Peace Action 

Mennonite Central Committee 

U.S. National Association of Korean Americans NC Alliance for Truth and Hope Nevada 

Coalition of Empowered Korean Americans Nuclear Age Peace Foundation 

Peace Action 

Peace Catalyst International 

Peace Treaty Now 

Ploughshares 

Presbyterian Church (USA), Office of Public Witness 

Quincy Institute 

RootsAction.org 

Seattle Evergreen Coalition 

The New England Korea Peace Campaign 

The Friends Committee on National Legislation 

The United Methodist Church — General Board of Church and Society 

The United Methodist Church — General Board of Global Ministries 

The United Methodist Church — General Board of Higher Education and Ministry 

West Virginia Campaign to Ban Landmines and Cluster Bombs 

Women Cross DMZ 

Washington Butterfly for Hope Win Without War 

World BEYOND War 


CC: National Security Advisor Mike Waltz 

Deputy National Security Advisor Alex Wong 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio


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