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N.Korea proposes military talks with S.Korea: report

US envoy on North Korea holds talks in China
Washington (AFP) Sept 15, 2010 - A special US envoy on North Korea is in China for talks as part of a new diplomatic initiative on Pyongyang, a State Department spokesman said Wednesday. Spokesman Philip Crowley said envoy Stephen Bosworth held talks Wednesday with his counterpart in China, Wu Dawei "as part of our ongoing consultations of our partners in the Six Party process." Bosworth expects to meet with Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on Thursday, Crowley added. The moves came with the so-called Six Party talks -- involving the US, Japan, China, Russia and North and South Korea -- on hold since 2009, at a time when Pyongyang was carrying out nuclear tests.

Bosworth has been in Asia determining if the time is right to talk with North Korea, as tensions ease a notch but as party meeting in the secretive state has raised new questions. The rush of diplomacy comes amid a slight easing of friction surrounding North Korea, with the United States allowing charities to fly in relief in the wake of floods and South Korea considering aid of its own. US officials and analysts expect the United States will eventually sit down for formal talks with North Korea. But few foresee breakthroughs amid signs the nuclear-armed regime is in the throes of leadership succession.

North Korea and China, its main ally, have been pushing for a resumption of six-way denuclearization talks from which Pyongyang stormed out last year. But President Barack Obama's administration has insisted on what it calls "strategic patience," saying it will not rush into talks and instead wants North Korea to make clear it abides by a 2005 deal to give up nuclear weapons. North Korea is believed either to have begun or to be on the verge of opening its most important political gathering in 30 years to anoint a successor to ailing 68-year-old strongman Kim Jong-Il. Senior North Korean officials have told international agencies in Pyongyang that the delegates' meeting has been delayed because of storm damage, Seoul's Yonhap news agency quoted a source as saying.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Sept 16, 2010
North Korea has proposed holding military talks with South Korea, a report said Thursday, in another apparent sign of easing tensions.

The North Wednesday suggested the working-level talks via a military communications line at the border truce village of Panmunjom, Yonhap news agency quoted military authorities in the South as saying.

Cross-border relations have been icy since South Korea and the United States, citing the findings of a multinational investigation, accused the North in May of torpedoing one of Seoul's warships.

The North denied involvement in the March sinking, which killed 46 people, and threatened retaliation for military exercises staged as a warning to Pyongyang.

But this month the North has returned the crew of a detained South Korean boat, offered to hold a new round of reunions for families separated by the peninsula's division and accepted flood aid from Seoul.

earlier related report
Easing sanctions on N. Korea 'very premature': US envoy
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 15, 2010 - The US pointman on North Korea said Wednesday that diplomatic efforts were under way to revive talks to stem Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions but said easing sanctions now would be "very premature".

"We are looking for evidence that North Korea now regards the possibility of negotiations seriously... We want talks that leave specific and concrete results," said Stephen Bosworth, the US special envoy on North Korea.

The isolated and impoverished communist country has staged several atomic and missile tests, and in April last year walked out of six-nation talks to denuclearise the Korean peninsula.

It was also blamed by a multinational panel for the deadly sinking of a South Korean navy ship in March this year.

China, North Korea's closest ally, has in recent weeks urged a resumption of the talks, which have been hosted by Beijing and involved the two Koreas, the United States, China, Russia and Japan.

However, Bosworth cautioned that "there is no reason at the moment to expect that there is going to be a flurry of diplomatic activities in the next few weeks. This is going to take some time."

Bosworth said he and Japanese officials had agreed all sides must work in the coming weeks to "look for the right opportunity in the right moment to reignite the multilateral effort to denuclearise the Korean peninsula".

His trip comes at a time of a slight easing of friction surrounding North Korea, with the United States allowing charities to fly in relief aid in the wake of floods and South Korea sending its own assistance.

But he noted that Washington and its allies would maintain a so-called two-track strategy -- continuing to enforce UN and other sanctions against the reclusive state while remaining open to productive dialogue.

"To discuss sanctions at this point is very premature," he said.

"It is very important to underline that this whole process does not depend just on decisions by the five -- China, Russia, the US, Japan and South Korea. It depends very importantly on the decisions and actions of North Korea."

Bosworth said Washington had not ruled out direct talks with Pyongyang.

"We had those in the past and I think they can take place again," he said. "I think they will take place when we assess that it would be useful to do so."

Bosworth arrived in Tokyo from Seoul on Tuesday and was to leave for Beijing later Wednesday before returning home.



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NUKEWARS
Key N.Korea party meeting draws near: state media
Seoul (AFP) Sept 14, 2010
A rare meeting of North Korea's ruling party seen as paving the way for an eventual leadership succession is drawing near, Pyongyang's official media said Tuesday without giving a date. The secretive North has never announced the start date for the communist party conference, its most important political gathering for 30 years, although many experts had expected it to begin last week. Th ... read more







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