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N. Korea: Sanctions are
declaration of war
Seoul -
North Korea on Tuesday blasted U.N. sanctions aimed at punishing the
country for its nuclear test, saying the measures amount to a
declaration of war and that the nation wouldn't cave in to such
pressure now that it's a nuclear weapons power.
The bellicose remarks — the central
government's first response to the U.N. measures imposed last weekend
— came as China warned the North against stoking tensions and the
American nuclear envoy arrived in South Korea for talks.
The North broke two days of silence
about the U.N. resolution adopted after its Oct. 9 nuclear test,
issuing a Foreign Ministry statement on its official Korean Central
News Agency.
"The resolution cannot be construed
otherwise than a declaration of a war" against the North, also known
as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
The North warned it "wants peace but
is not afraid of war" and that it would "deal merciless blows" against
anyone who violates its sovereignty.
The communist nation "had remained
unfazed in any storm and stress in the past when it had no nuclear
weapons," the statement said. "It is quite nonsensical to expect the
DPRK to yield to the pressure and threat of someone at this time when
it has become a nuclear weapons state."
China has long been one of North
Korea's few friends, but relations have been frayed in recent months
by Pyongyang's missile tests and last week's nuclear blast.
On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesman Liu Jianchao warned Pyongyang against aggravating tensions
and said the North should help resolve the situation "through dialogue
and consultation."
The verbal volley came as the U.S.
pressed on with a round of diplomacy in Asia aimed at finding
consensus on how to implement the sanctions. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice was expected to arrive in Japan on Wednesday before
traveling to South Korea and China.
After landing in Seoul on Tuesday,
the U.S. nuclear envoy, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill,
said he couldn't confirm media reports that the North may be preparing
for another test explosion.
But Hill stressed that the
international community should make the North pay a "high price" for
its "reckless behavior."
Hill told reporters he wanted to talk
to South Korean officials about reports the North was getting ready
for a second nuclear test. Japan's government also had "information"
about another possible blast, Foreign Minister Taro Aso told
reporters, without elaborating.
But a senior South Korean official
told foreign journalists that despite signs of a possible second test,
it was unlikely to happen immediately.
"We have yet to confirm any imminent
signs of a second nuclear test," the official said on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
China, whose support for the
sanctions is key to whether they will have any impact on neighboring
North Korea, began examining trucks at the North Korean border.
The measures ban trade with the North
in major weapons and materials that could be used in its ballistic
missile and weapons of mass destruction programs. They call for all
countries to inspect cargo to and from North Korea to enforce the
prohibition.
Hill planned to meet his South Korean
counterpart, Chun Yung-woo, and the two were to hold a three-way
meeting with their Russian counterpart, Deputy Foreign Minister
Alexander Alexeyev, who has been in Seoul since Sunday.
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail
Fradkov was also due in Seoul for talks with his South Korean
counterpart. North Korea was expected to top their agenda.
South Korea has said it would fully
comply with the sanctions but has also indicated that it has no
intention of halting key economic projects with the North, despite
concerns that they may help fund the North's nuclear and missile
programs.
"Sanctions against North Korea should
be done in a way that draws North Korea to the dialogue table," South
Korean Prime Minister Han Myung-sook said Tuesday ahead of her meeting
with Fradkov, according to Yonhap news agency. "There should never be
a way that causes armed clashes."
In Washington, U.S. National
Intelligence Director John Negroponte's office said Monday that air
samples gathered last week contain radioactive materials that confirm
that North Korea conducted an underground nuclear explosion.
In a short statement posted on its
Web site, Negroponte's office also confirmed that the size of the
explosion was less than 1 kiloton, a comparatively small nuclear
detonation. Each kiloton is equal to the force produced by 1,000 tons
of TNT.
It was the first official
confirmation from the United States that a nuclear detonation took
place, as Pyongyang has claimed.
Meanwhile, the U.S. envoy on North
Korean human rights, Jay Lefkowitz, urged China and South Korea to
rethink aid policies to North Korea, saying unmonitored assistance
could prop up a "criminal regime."
China and South Korea provide large
amounts of badly needed economic and energy aid. Both Beijing and
Seoul worry that a collapsed regime in Pyongyang could send refugees
flooding over their borders. -- The
Associated Press
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