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Security Council OKs N. Korea
sanctions
United Nations
- The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously on Saturday to
impose punishing sanctions on North Korea including ship searches for
banned weapons, calling Pyongyang's claimed nuclear test "a clear
threat to international peace and security."
North Korea immediately rejected the
resolution, and its U.N. ambassador walked out of the council chamber
after accusing its members of a "gangster-like" action which neglects
the nuclear threat posed by the United States.
The U.S.-sponsored resolution demands
that the reclusive communist nation abandon its nuclear weapons
program, and orders all countries to prevent North Korea from
importing or exporting any material for weapons of mass destruction or
ballistic missiles. It orders nations to freeze assets of people or
businesses connected to these programs, and ban the individuals from
traveling.
The resolution also calls on all
countries to inspect cargo leaving and arriving in North Korea to
prevent any illegal trafficking in unconventional weapons or ballistic
missiles. The final draft was softened from language authorizing
searches, but was still unacceptable to China — the North's closest
ally and largest trading partner — which said it would not carry out
any searches.
U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said
North Korea's proclaimed test "poses one of the gravest threats to
international peace and security that this council has ever had to
confront."
"Today, we are sending a strong and
clear message to North Korea and other would be proliferators that
there will be serious repercussions in continuing to pursue weapons of
mass destruction," he said, in what appeared to be a clear warning to
Iran whose nuclear ambitions come before the Security Council again
next week.
North Korea's U.N. Ambassador Pak Gil
Yon countered by blaming the United States for forcing the country to
conduct a test because of its "nuclear threat, sanctions and
pressure."
"The Democratic People's Republic of
Korea is ready for talks, dialogue and confrontation," Pak said. "If
the United States increases pressure upon the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea persistently, the DPRK will continue to take
physical countermeasures considering it as a declaration of war."
North Korea has made similar threats
in the past, and has also said it might conduct a second nuclear test
in response to U.N. sanctions.
The vote came after the United
States, Britain and France overcame last-minute differences with
Russia and China during what the Russian ambassador called "tense
negotiations."
The resolution demands North Korea
eliminate all its nuclear weapons but expressly rules out military
action against the country, a demand by the Russians and Chinese.
Bolton warned Pyongyang, however, that if it continues pursuing
nuclear weapons, the U.S. would seek further measures.
The Security Council condemned the
nuclear test that North Korea said it conducted on Oct. 9. It demanded
that North Korea immediately return to six-nation talks aimed at
persuading Pyongyang to dismantle its weapons program without
precondition.
It also imposed sanctions for the
North's "flagrant disregard" of the council's appeal not to detonate a
nuclear device and demanded that North Korea "not conduct any further
nuclear test or launch of a ballistic missile."
"This action by the United Nations,
which was swift and tough, says that we are united in our
determination to see to it that the Korean peninsula is
nuclear-weapons free," President Bush said.
South Korea's Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon,
who was chosen on Friday to become the next U.N. secretary-general,
said in an interview with The Associated Press that the council's
resolution "sends a very strong, clear and unified message to North
Korea."
"I hope that North Korea will comply
with this resolution," he said. "I hope that all member states of the
United Nations will fully implement this resolution."
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
said Japan was considering additional sanctions against North Korea in
line with the resolution, following its move Friday to ban trade with
the North and close its ports to North Korean ships.
"We were able to send a strong
message that the international community will not tolerate North
Korea's owning nuclear weapons," Abe told reporters Sunday.
In a measure aimed at North Korea's
tiny elite, the resolution also bans the sale of luxury goods to the
country. The North's reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il, is known for his
love of cognac and lobster and collection of thousands of bottles of
vintage French wine.
To meet Russian and Chinese concerns,
the Americans eliminated a complete ban on the sale of conventional
weapons. Instead, the resolution limits the embargo to major hardware
such as tanks, warships, combat aircraft and missiles.
The council's go-ahead for the
inspection of cargo gave broader global scope to the U.S.-led
Proliferation Security Initiative launched in 2003 which urges
countries to stop banned weapons from suspect countries including
North Korea and Iran.
China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya
said Beijing allowed the cargo provision to be included in what he
called a "watered-down" resolution even though the government is
opposed to it.
"China strongly urges the countries
concerned to adopt a prudent and responsible attitude in this regard
and refrain from taking any provocative steps that may intensify the
tensions," he said.
Wang said he did not consider the
North Korean ambassador's response the official reply from Pyongyang,
which he awaits. "The important thing is not what they say here," Wang
said.
The overriding issue, he said, is
"how we work together for peace and security in the region."
Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly
Churkin said Moscow got what it wanted — a strong resolution but one
that is also aimed at "prevention of a further escalation of tension."
North Korea's Pak told the Security
Council that the nuclear test was not inconsistent with the country's
goal of a denuclearized Korean peninsula.
"The DPRK clarified more than once
that it would feel no need to possess even a single nuke when it is no
longer exposed to the United States' threat, after it has dropped its
hostile policy to the DPRK and confidence has been built between the
two countries," he said.
Following Pak's speech, Bolton took
the floor again saying "I'm not going to waste any of our time
responding." But he noted that North Korea had done Saturday exactly
what it did in July after the council adopted limited sanctions for
its ballistic missile tests — immediately reject the resolution and
walk out.
"It is the contemporary equivalent of
Nikita Khrushchev pounding his shoe on the desk," Bolton said,
referring to the Soviet leader's legendary act of protest at the U.N.
General Assembly in 1960.
Bolton later told reporters that the
next step is to start work on implementing the resolution.
"Hopefully on saner reflections
perhaps they'll begin to accept that if they don't change course, the
only future for them is continued isolation," he said.
On Friday, U.S. officials said an air
sampling after North Korea's claimed nuclear test detected radioactive
debris consistent with an atomic explosion. However, the Bush
administration and congressional officials said no final determination
had been made about the nature of Monday's mystery-shrouded blast.
The U.S. and other nations trying to
persuade the North to give up its atomic program continued a flurry of
high-level diplomatic visits, including a trip to Asia by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice meant to present a unified front to North
Korea.
The resolution invokes Chapter 7 of
the U.N. Charter, which the U.S. views as a necessary because it makes
economic and diplomatic sanctions mandatory.
China and Russia normally object to
the Chapter 7 provision because it carries the possibility of military
enforcement. The Bush administration used the same provision to
justify its invasion of Iraq, and Moscow and Beijing worry the U.S.
might do the same eventually with North Korea — even though Bush has
said the U.S. has no plans to attack.
But in a compromise also used in July
to unanimously vote on a resolution condemning North Korean missile
launches, the text added mention of Article 41 of the chapter, which
permits only "means not involving the use of military force."
A Russian nuclear envoy who visited
North Korea said Saturday he pressed the North to return to six-nation
nuclear disarmament talks. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander
Alexeyev said he had a "very useful" meeting Friday with Kim Gye Gwan,
the North's nuclear negotiator, but did not say how Kim responded.
Pyongyang has boycotted the
six-nation talks for the past 13 months to protest financial measures
imposed by Washington for alleged counterfeiting and money-laundering. --
The
Associated Press
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