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N. Korea sought military talks with US: report

N. Korea raps Seoul over 'mad' military exercise
Seoul (AFP) Feb 23, 2011 - North Korea Wednesday criticised a "mad" upcoming major military exercise by the United States and South Korea, saying it heightens the danger of war. The drill "proves South Korean warmongers are going crazier in provoking a war regardless of the people's desire for dialogue and peace", said Pyongyang's government newspaper Minju Joson. The annual Key Resolve/Foal Eagle drill, starting next Monday and ending on March 10, will take place amid high tensions on the peninsula following two deadly border incidents last year. The North's shelling of a South Korean border island last November killed four people including civilians and briefly sparked fears of war.

Seoul says Pyongyang also torpedoed one of its warships near the disputed Yellow Sea border last March, a charge it denies. Inter-Korean military talks aimed at easing tensions broke down this month. The newspaper, quoted by the North's official news agency, said the South's authorities "have answered our suggestion of wide-ranging talks with a mad military exercise. "With South Korean warmongers' reckless war provocations, the inter-Korean relationship is worsening and the danger of war is increasing day by day," it said. The United States bases 28,500 troops in the South to deter any attack from the North. It says the annual drill is defensive while the North habitually describes it as a rehearsal for invasion.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Feb 21, 2011
North Korea last month offered to hold high-level military talks with the United States to discuss tensions on the Korean peninsula and nuclear disarmament, a report said Monday.

The North proposed the talks in a letter from its defence minister Kim Yong-Chun to his US counterpart Robert Gates, JoongAng Ilbo newspaper said, citing a South Korean government official.

It said the proposal was delivered to the US embassy in China on January 25, five days after Pyongyang made the same offer to South Korea, which accepted dialogue.

The United States reportedly rejected the offer, saying inter-Korean talks should come first.

The inter-Korean military talks broke down when Pyongyang officials walked out of a preparatory meeting on February 9, after Seoul demanded an apology for the deadly shelling of a border island in November.

Seoul's foreign ministry spokesman declined to comment on the newspaper report, saying it was a matter between the North and the United States.

Despite lambasting the United States as a potential invader, the North has long sought direct negotiations with Washington about its nuclear programmes. It also wants talks on a treaty to formally end the 1950-53 war.

The US says a peace treaty can be considered as part of six-nation nuclear disarmament talks, which have been stalled since December 2008.

Inter-Korean tensions are high after the island shelling, and an alleged torpedo attack by the North on a South Korean warship last March that claimed 46 lives. Pyongyang denies involvement in the sinking.

Yonhap news agency, citing a senior Seoul official, said Sunday the North has started digging tunnels at its nuclear test site in apparent preparation for a third atomic detonation.

Asked about the report, Seoul's foreign ministry said Monday it is watching the North Korean nuclear situation carefully "with all possible scenarios in mind".

The North's disclosure last November of an uranium enrichment programme -- a potential second way to make bombs -- has also raised security fears.

South Korea wants the UN Security Council to debate the programme but China, the North's sole major ally and economic prop, is resisting such a move.

China's vice foreign minister Zhang Zhijun held "friendly" talks Monday with Foreign Minister Pak Ui-Chun during a visit to Pyongyang, the North's official news agency said.

Zhang arrived Sunday and met first vice foreign minister Kim Kye-Gwan, the North's envoy to the six-party talks.

China wants to revive those talks to ease overall tensions on the peninsula. The United States, Japan and South Korea say the North must first mend ties with the South.

Russia is the other member of the forum.



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NUKEWARS
Report: N. Korea appears to prepare nuclear test
Seoul (AFP) Feb 20, 2011
North Korea has started digging tunnels at its nuclear test site in apparent preparation for a third atomic detonation, a report said Sunday. The North started building at least two new tunnels at its Punggye-ri facility in northeastern North Hamgyong province for a possible underground atomic test, Yonhap news agency said, citing a senior Seoul official. The report comes after Pyongyang ... read more







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