North Korean officials began informal talks Monday with a group of American experts in Oslo, Norway, amid speculation that Washington may seek dialogue with Pyongyang, diplomatic sources said.

It's their first Track II meeting in half a year. The previous session was held in Geneva, Switzerland.

"It's my understanding that dialogue between North Korean government officials and U.S. civilian experts opened today (Monday) in a suburb of Oslo and will continue through tomorrow," a source here said.

The North Korean delegation is reportedly led by Choe Son-hui, director-general of the North America bureau chief of the communist nation's foreign ministry. Her counterpart is Suzanne DiMaggio, director and senior fellow at New America, a think tank based in Washington D.C., according to another source.

This composite image provided by Yonhap News TV shows North Korean diplomats Choe Son-hui (L), head of the foreign ministry's North America bureau, and Jang Il-hoon, deputy ambassador to the U.N. (Yonhap)

This week's meeting comes amid a let-up in military tensions on the Korean Peninsula. The North did not conduct a nuclear test or a long-range rocket launch in April despite a view that it may take such a provocative act to mark a series of key political events in the month.

In South Korea, its people are about to pick their new president, with expectations running high over a change of mood in inter-Korean ties that have long been frosty.

The U.S. State Department would not attach any special meaning to the Track II dialogue, which is held semi-regularly.

But North Korea watchers took note of the timing of the meeting this time, saying it may provide the two sides with a chance for sort of "exploratory" talks. (Yonhap)

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