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U.S. pleased with APEC's N. Korea
stance
By TERENCE HUNT
Hanoi, Vietnam
- President Bush, trying to fortify global pressure on North
Korea, on Saturday backed Pacific Rim leaders in demanding that the
communist regime abandon its nuclear weapons program.
In Hanoi for the annual summit of the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, Bush worked to preserve U.S.
solidarity with five nations getting ready to restart nuclear
negotiations with Pyongyang.
The White House endorsed a statement
all 21 Pacific Rim members will issue to express their worries about
North Korea's first nuclear test on Oct. 9 and its missile launches in
July. "I think we're pleased with that statement and I think it will
be a good contribution to the diplomacy," National Security Adviser
Stephen Hadley told reporters.
But while cheered with the
APEC
statement against North Korea, Bush failed to win South Korea's
support for intercepting ships suspected of carrying supplies possibly
bound for North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
The president spent the afternoon at
the APEC forum, held at a gleaming, massive building that Vietnam
constructed especially for the summit in hopes of elevating its global
profile. The leaders were gathering again in the evening for a gala
dinner and cultural performance.
In between meetings, Bush strolled
through a red-tiled courtyard at the U.S. military's Joint POW/MIA
Accounting Command here, charged with recovering and identifying the
remains of Americans who were killed in action in Vietnam but never
brought home.
Making no comment and asking no
questions of his guides, Bush peered briefly at photos of recovery
teams in the field and tables full of recovered items, such as a
dented helmet, rusty rifles and even plaster moldings of bones.
With North Korea saying it is ready
to resume the talks, Bush was meeting individually with each of the
four U.S. partners in the discussions to coordinate strategy: South
Korea's Roh Moo-hyun and Japan's Shinzo Abe on Saturday and Russia's
Vladimir Putin and China's Hu
Jintao on Sunday.
The president urged strong
enforcement of U.N. sanctions against North Korea, imposed after it
tested a nuclear bomb last month, despite Pyongyang's new willingness
to reopen six-party negotiations.
Addressing both North Korea and wary
allies, Bush said Pyongyang has much to look forward to if it agrees
in those talks to give up its nuclear weapons and development of such
weapons.
Possible steps include a ceremony to
formally declare an end to the Korean War, humanitarian and economic
aid, and an end to a U.S. campaign to cut off the North's access to
foreign banks. That move, aimed at alleged money laundering and
counterfeiting by Pyongyang, caused the North to walk away from the
negotiating table last year.
"We want the North Korean leaders to
hear that if it gives up its weapons — nuclear weapons ambitions —
that we would be willing to enter into security arrangements with the
North Koreans, as well as move forward new economic incentives for the
North Korean people," the president said at the end of an hourlong
meeting with Roh.
Hadley stressed that North Korea must
take concrete steps on its nuclear program in order for talks to
resume. But he did not get specific on what those steps must be.
South Korea is perhaps Washington's
toughest sell, with Roh critical of Bush's hard-line approach.
Seoul embraces an engagement policy
with its reclusive neighbor, fearing any approach that would irritate
the communist regime or contribute to instability that would send
refugees flowing over their border. Earlier this week, South Korea
said it would remain only an observer of — and not a full participant
in — the U.S.-led Proliferation Security Initiative, an international
ship-inspection program aimed at preventing North Korean weapons
trafficking.
The Bush administration has made
clear it wants more aggressive cooperation from South Korea. But after
the president and Roh met for more than an hour, the South Korean
leader politely showed little sign of budging.
Roh
said his country "is not taking part in the full scope" of the
security initiative, but that it would "support the principles and
goals of the PSI," and would cooperate in preventing the transfer of
materiel for weapons of mass destruction in northeast Asia. Bush
pronounced himself satisfied.
"I appreciate the cooperation we're
receiving from South Korea," he said.
Neither leader took questions.
The White House sought to put Seoul's
position in the best light. U.S. officials said Seoul is committed to
the goal of preventing any weapons transfers, and expressed sympathy
for how politically dicey the issue is within South Korea, where many
people feel affinity with the populace in the North.
White House press secretary Tony Snow
refused to explain how South Korea would help make sure North Korea is
not able to move weapons materials by sea. Hadley suggested South
Korea might participate in exercises on the high seas, but must stick
to agreements it has made with North Korea covering the waters
surrounding the peninsula.
"We don't view this that somehow
South Korea has rejected PSI," he said.
As a major supplier of energy and
food aid, China has even more influence over Pyongyang than South
Korea and also has resisted interdictions or applying strong
sanctions. But China, stung by North Korea's defiant test, has shown
some support for enforcing the U.N. sanctions and played a leading
role in persuading North Korea to return to nuclear negotiations.
Japan, meanwhile, has advocated the
toughest approach. Tokyo imposed its own sanctions on North Korea
after the test and, with the U.S., led the effort for the U.N.
sanctions.
With Washington and Tokyo virtually
in lockstep, Bush and Abe said very little about North Korea after an
hourlong lunch. The two reiterated what Bush called "our common
commitment" to resolve the dispute.
The meeting — followed by three-way
talks between Bush, Roh and Abe — was their first since Japan's new
prime minister took office two months ago as the successor to
Junichiro Koizumi, one of Bush's closest friends on the world stage.
"I admire the prime minister's
intellect. I'm very comfortable with his style," Bush said of Abe. --
The
Associated Press
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