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N. Korea: U.S. leading region
toward war
Beijing - North
Korea accused the United States of leading the region toward war
Thursday in an apparent attempt by the communist nation to increase
pressure on negotiators holding a second day of talks on its nuclear
programs.
There was no indication whether any
progress had come from the first day of meetings in China on
Wednesday, the first high-level U.S.-North Korean contact in six
months. The U.S. Embassy would say only that the three sides spent the
day "participating and expressing their views."
But North Korea continued to try to
ratchet up the pressure and is believed to want economic aid in
exchange for concessions.
It's leaders are outraged over U.S.
moves to cut off oil shipments because of its suspected nuclear
weapons program, and fears it is next on Washington's list for
military action.
"The situation on the Korean
Peninsula is so tense that a war may break out any moment due to the
U.S. moves," the North's KCNA news agency.
It said relations with the United
States had hit "rock bottom" because President Bush named
North Korea as part of an "axis of evil," along with Iran
and Iraq.
KCNA said the war in Iraq had shown
the only way for a country to protect itself was to have a strong
military deterrent. Officials from Seoul and Washington say the swift
U.S.-led victory in Iraq prompted North Korea to agree to the nuclear
talks.
North Korea also said it was ready to
settle the dispute over its suspected nuclear weapons programs and
that the "master key" for successful talks was for the
United States to drop its hostile policy toward Pyongyang.
Late Wednesday, Chinese Foreign
Minister Li Zhaoxing and Secretary of State Colin Powell talked by
phone and agreed that the Beijing talks were beneficial, China's
official Xinhua News Agency reported.
North Korea and China fought against
the United States in the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended without a
peace treaty. North Korea and Washington have no formal relations and
are still technically at war.
In a likely reference to North
Korea's demand for a nonaggression treaty with Washington, KCNA said:
"The U.S. should settle the talks from a sincere stand and strive
to settle the essential issue."
Washington has refused to offer a
formal treaty but says it would consider some sort of written
assurance.
China, the North's ally and major aid
donor, nevertheless says it doesn't want Pyongyang to acquire nuclear
weapons and has appealed for a negotiated settlement to the crisis.
The talks are being led by Assistant
Secretary of State James Kelly and Ri Gun, deputy director of American
affairs for North Korea's Foreign Ministry. China's delegation is led
by Fu Ying, director general of the Asian Affairs Department of its
Foreign Ministry.
The United States hopes eventually to
include Japan and South Korea in the talks. Kelly briefed South Korean
and Japanese diplomats in Beijing following Wednesday's discussions,
the U.S. Embassy said. He is scheduled to visit Seoul for meetings
immediately after the Beijing talks.
Washington says the North revealed
during a visit by Kelly to Pyongyang in October that it was trying to
develop nuclear weapons in violation of a 1994 pledge. The North has
disputed the U.S. claim.
The North likely wants aid for its
economy, which has been crippled by the loss of Soviet subsidies and
years of drought and mismanagement.
Since the latest nuclear tensions
erupted, Pyongyang has become the first country to withdraw from the
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and restarted a plutonium-producing
reactor. -- Associated Press
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