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NUKEWARS
Lithuania warns against unilateral US nuclear cuts
by Staff Writers
Vilnius (AFP) June 20, 2013


UN's Ban says Korea talks should focus on denuclearisation
Beijing (AFP) June 20, 2013 - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that talks regarding the Korean peninsula should be first and foremost about ending North Korea's nuclear programme.

Ban said he had noted Pyongyang's calls for dialogue, but added that "any meaningful dialogue should be firmly anchored in the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula", in comments released by the UN during a trip to China.

He urged North Korean authorities "to fully comply with the relevant Security Council resolutions with the aim of realising the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula".

North Korea, which has carried out three underground nuclear tests since 2006 and has also defied the international community with rocket launches, is under heavy UN-sponsored sanctions.

A visiting North Korean official expressed willingness Wednesday to rejoin long-stalled talks aimed at the country's denuclearisation, China's foreign ministry said, the second time in a month Pyongyang has told Beijing it is ready for such dialogue.

The North's first vice foreign minister Kim Kye-Gwan made the remark on a trip to Beijing on Wednesday, the ministry said in a statement, but offered no concrete details.

Tensions have run high on the peninsula since the North's third nuclear test in February which triggered new UN sanctions that ignited an angry response from Pyongyang, including threats of nuclear attacks on Seoul and Washington.

Ban, a former South Korean foreign minister, repeated calls for discussions on the issue, "particularly through dialogue between South and North Korea, who are the directly concerned parties," he said.

Tempers have cooled in recent months amid indications Pyongyang may be adopting a less confrontational stance.

North Korea on Sunday offered to hold talks with the US, who replied that preconditions for such talks have not been met.

Pyongyang, however, abruptly cancelled a planned meeting with South Korea shortly before reaching out to Washington.

Ban has met with high-ranking officials including President Xi Jinping during his trip to China.

"I expressed my sincere appreciation to the Chinese president and also asked him to continue to play a constructive role and to first of all reduce tension and facilitate a dialogue between South and North Korea," Ban said.

NATO member Lithuania on Thursday said any unilateral moves by the United States to reduce nuclear arsenals would be "irresponsible" if the Baltic state's Soviet-era master Russia did not follow suit.

"Unilateral disarmament would be irresponsible. It would be a very careless thing to do, especially taking into account Russia's reaction to such proposals," Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite told AFP in Vilnius.

US President Barack Obama on Wednesday called for both Washington and Moscow to reduce strategic nuclear arms stockpiles by up to a third, at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate, a symbol of a Europe divided under the Cold War.

Russian officials reacted coldly to the proposal, saying the United States should first address Moscow's concerns over NATO plans for European missile defence.

Obama had also pledged Wednesday that he would work with NATO allies "to seek bold reductions in US and Russian tactical weapons in Europe".

The ex-communist Eastern European states that are now part of the NATO Western defence alliance have long expressed alarm over alleged short-range tactical nuclear weapons stockpiles in Russia's Kaliningrad exclave, which is sandwiched between EU members Lithuania and Poland.

Grybauskaite insisted Thursday that any nuclear weapons negotiations with Russia must not affect NATO's missile defence plans.

"Even if such disarmament took place and negotiations started between the US and Russia, then Lithuania's position would be very clear that this disarmament cannot take place at the expense of other strategic projects, including the missile defence in Europe," she told AFP.

The Baltic state of three million people, which broke from the Soviet Union in 1990 and joined the European Union and NATO in 2004, has long voiced concern that bilateral US-Russia arms talks could impact regional security in Eastern Europe.

In 2010, after the previous cut was agreed to as part of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, Grybauskaite said US and Russian disarmament talks "could violate the interests of Eastern Europe and Baltic states".

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