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China-Japan-Koreas
Gates: US prevented ROK strike against North in 2010
2014-01-19
South Korea declined to comment Wednesday on revelations that the United States talked it down from launching a retaliatory airstrike on North Korea in 2010.
Geez, this American administration doesn't let anyone have any fun! Or from another perspective, they keep the locals from doing what needs desperately to be done.
The claims were made in the newly published memoir of former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, in which he also describes former South Korean president Roh Moo-Hyun as "probably a little bit crazy."

The 2010 incident followed the North's surprise shelling of a South Korean border island in November of that year. The attack triggered what Gates labeled a "very dangerous crisis," with the South Korean government of then-President Lee Myung-Bak initially insisting on a robust military response.

"South Korea's original plans for retaliation were, we thought, disproportionately aggressive, involving both aircraft and artillery," Gates wrote in his memoir.

"We were worried the exchanges could escalate dangerously," he added.

Over the next few days, Gates said he, US President Barack Obama and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had numerous telephone calls with their South Korean counterparts in an effort to calm things down.

"Ultimately, South Korea simply returned artillery fire on the location of the North Koreans' batteries that had started the whole affair," he said.

The South Korean government declined to confirm Gates's version of events.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Kim Jong Il, in message to S. Korea president, hopes for better ties
2009-08-24
[Kyodo: Korea] North Korean leader Kim Jong Il signaled Sunday in an oral message delivered to South Korean President Lee Myung Bak that the North hopes to improve the badly frayed ties between the two rival powers in the Korean Peninsula.

Lee received the message in a meeting at his presidential office with senior North Korean envoys who arrived in Seoul on Friday to mourn the death of former President Kim Dae Jung, South Korean presidential spokesman Lee Dong Kwan said.

The meeting was President Lee's first with North Korean officials since he came to power in February last year.

Kim's message was ''about improvement of cooperation between the South and the North,'' spokesman Lee said, refusing to go into details about the contents of the message.

In response, President Lee outlined South Korea's ''consistent and firm principles'' on the North and told the North Korean envoys -- led by Kim Ki Nam, secretary of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, and Kim Yang Gon, the North Korean point man for inter-Korean affairs -- to convey the message to the North Korean leader, the presidential spokesman said.

An official at the South Korean presidential office said the contents of Kim Jong Il's oral message were ''sensitive'' and the message will not be made public, Yonhap News Agency reported.

Lee's meeting with the North Korean envoys, initially set for 10 a.m., was moved forward by about an hour, and ended at around 9:30 a.m., officials at the presidential office said. ''Everything went very well,'' Kim Ki Nam told reporters in front of a Seoul hotel, shortly before the North Korean delegation headed back to the North.

South Korea's political parties hailed the meeting between Lee and the North Korean envoys, voicing hope it would help mend the strained inter-Korean relations. ''The dialogue channel between the South and the North has just opened at the highest level,'' a spokesman from the ruling Grand National Party said in a statement, carried by Yonhap News Agency.

A spokesman from the main opposition Democratic Party also welcomed the opening of direct dialogue between the two Koreas.

Originally scheduled to leave on Saturday, the North Koreans extended their stay for one day and asked for a meeting with the South Korean president, South Korean government officials said.

On Friday, the North Koreans visited South Korea's National Assembly where the body of Kim Dae Jung was lying in state and placed a wreath before Kim's coffin.

The late president, who pursued a ''sunshine policy'' of reconciliation with North Korea, held a landmark summit with Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang in June 2000.

Lee has pursued a hard line toward the North since he came to office, reversing a decade of policies of engagement pursued by Kim Dae Jung and his successor Roh Moo Hyun, who committed suicide in May.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Why Did Norks Test Nuclear Weapon Now?
2009-05-26
North Korea conducted its second nuclear test at 9:54 A.M on Monday. The Blue House swiftly convened an emergency meeting of the National Security Council. Chosun Central News Agency (KCNA) then stated, "The Republic (North Korea) successfully conducted a second underground nuclear test on May 25, 2009 as part of measures to strengthen its nuclear power in self-defense. This nuclear test was safely carried out in the light of the explosive power and manipulation of technology on a highly developed level."

Although the time was unknown, and today is earlier than most people thought likely, the fact that North Korea planned to conduct a second nuclear test was common knowledge, admitted by North Korea itself. The question many people are asking, though, is why North Korea did it now.

First, it could be due to the domestic situation in the North. Since Kim Jong Ils illness, North Korea has faced many challenges to its domestic situation and stability. Especially, the Kim Jong Il regime has now moved to handle the third generation succession and it is causing tensions in the hierarchy.

For the proclaimed purpose of forging a strong and prosperous state by 2012, North Korea has recently consolidated the National Defense Commission and maintained its domestic power through personnel changes, in order to bed in the succession ahead of the one hundredth anniversary of Kim Il Sungs birth. However, disagreements on the appointment of a successor to Kim Jong Il within the ruling family or inner circles might well remain. Advancing the date for the nuclear test could have been because the North was trying to clear up disagreements with a unifying hard-line move.

Second, North Korea is trying to press the U.S. to hold a bilateral meeting with the North after being acknowledged as a nuclear-armed state. Since Kim Jong Ils illness, the North has been issuing threats and challenging the international community. The second nuclear test is an act cut from the same cloth. At the same time it is an appeal to China to act as an intermediary between the U.S. and North Korea for a bilateral meeting, since China needs and wants to have calm and peaceful neighbors on its eastern flank.

Third, Kim Jong Il wants to see South Korean social conflict. He may even be embarking on a plan to "kill" Lee Myung Bak, over and above the "taming" that is standard North Korean negotiating strategy with any new adversary. At this time, during the period of mourning for former President Roh Moo Hyun, Kim may see weakness in the Lee administration. Through this nuclear test, he may be pushing the South to resurrect some form of engagement policy.
I'd bet on this one though the three stated reasons are not mutually exclusive. It dovetails with the hard-line push on the Kaesong industrial site, the even more vitriolic than usual spittle, the kidnapping of the two American journalists, and the hard-line towards the West in general. The SKors are the weak link in the alliance of them, Japan and the U.S., so that's where you go to shake things up. Watch and see if Bambi tries to placate the Norks as a favor to a request from the South.
I'd also substitute 'North Korean leadership' for 'Kim Jong Il'.
Therefore, the Souths administration should consider this a domestic emergency, resolve to avoid domestic conflict and revive the TCOG (Trilateral Coordination and Oversight Group)with the U.S., Japan and South Korea. Seoul should also pay close attention to any future Chinese actions, and any disagreements that arise between China and the U.S.

First and foremost, the government should not allow conflict between pro- and anti-government factions in South Korean society to spread at this time of crisis.
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China-Japan-Koreas
SKor Held Incommunicado in Nork-land for 2nd Day
2009-04-02
It is now day two since North Korea detained a South Korean working at the joint Kaesong Industrial Complex. The Hyundai Asan employee in his 40s has been under interrogation since Monday after being accused of criticizing the communist state's political system and trying to talk a North Korean female worker into defecting.

The Unification Ministry says it is still awaiting a response from Pyongyang regarding the detainee's rights to an attorney, which the two Koreas have agreed.

Under the agreement, North Korea can interrogate and choose to either warn, fine, or send back a South Korean who violates its rules at the industrial park.
The South Koreans have apparently invested over $11 billion in Kaesong and related upgrades to the North during Roh Moo Hyun's administration, including a recent $2.5 billion expansion there. The reward is to have their businesspeople held hostage. This will do wonders for investment in the future.
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China-Japan-Koreas
South Korean MPs vote to extend Iraq troop deployment
2007-12-29
South Korea’s parliament voted Friday to keep troops in Iraq for one more year, a move aimed at cementing the alliance with the United States in the face of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.

The MPs endorsed a government proposal to extend the contingent’s stay until December 2008 but to halve the size of the force to about 650, a spokesman for the National Assembly said. The force reduction has already taken place, with about 600 troops returning home over the past few weeks. The remaining 650 will stay for one more year, the defence ministry said. President Roh Moo-Hyun had called in October for the troops to continue their reconstruction and medical mission for another year.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Polls open in SKorea election, conservative seen ahead
2007-12-19
Polls opened Wednesday in South Korea's presidential election, with a business-friendly conservative tipped to end a decade of left-leaning rule despite an upcoming fraud investigation. Voting began at 6:00 am (2100 GMT Tuesday), a National Election Commission spokesman said, and will close at 6:00 pm. The result is expected by 10:00 pm. Up to 37.6 million people are eligible to vote at 13,178 polling stations. But the commission predicts a relatively low turnout of below 65 percent because the contest has long been seen as a one-horse race.

Lee Myung-Bak, the opposition Grand National Party candidate, was leading his rivals by wide margins when final opinion polls were published last week. Since then, parliament has voted to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate claims he was involved in a 2001 share manipulation scandal. But analysts still expect him to triumph over his closest rivals, Chung Dong-Young of the liberal pro-government United New Democratic Party and rightwing independent Lee Hoi-Chang.

A total of 10 candidates are standing but only three have recorded more than single figures in opinion polls. Lee Myung-Bak, a 65-year-old former construction executive and ex-mayor of Seoul, is best trusted by many to reinvigorate the economy -- the key preoccupation of voters. Growth is forecast at close to five percent this year. But there are frequent grumbles about high youth unemployment, an ever-widening income gap and high property and other prices in the world's 13th largest economy.

Lee Tuesday promised a "new era" if voters elect him. "Businesses will no longer be reluctant to invest. Consumers will open their purses. Markets will be vitalised. Foreign investors will rush here," he said.

However, any victory for him would usher in weeks of political uncertainty as the independent investigation goes ahead. State prosecutors had on December 5 cleared Lee of involvement in the case linked to the now-defunct BBK investment firm and to his detained former business partner. Lee had always said he had nothing to do with the firm. But his opponents on Sunday publicised a video clip of a speech he made in 2000, in which he says he founded BBK.

On Monday parliament voted to start the new inquiry. Local media predicted it would report before a new leader takes office on February 25, raising the possibility of a president-elect being interrogated or even indicted. Lee has said he made erroneous comments on the video because he was trying to promote new financial business. On Tuesday he again denied any wrongdoing. "Tens or even hundreds of special investigations would never change the results because there is only one truth," he said.

His rival Chung suffers from his past membership of the unpopular Roh Moo-Hyun government and his failure to unite all liberal forces behind his standard. His achievements as a former unification minister in charge of relations with North Korea appear not to have greatly boosted his support. Voters see policy towards their communist neighbour as only a side election issue, according to surveys, because moves to scrap its nuclear programme are making progress.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Koreas agree on cross-border train
2007-12-03
North and South Korea have agreed to run a regular daily cross-border freight train service from next week for the first time in over half a century, officials said on Sunday.

Negotiators from both sides on Saturday mapped out details on the rail service at talks in the North in a follow-up to their leaders’ agreement, the South’s unification ministry said in a statement.

President Roh Moo-Hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il agreed at a historic summit in early October to resume regular freight services, and both sides last month set December 11 for their inauguration. The service, the first since the 1950-53 Korean War, will begin with a twice-daily border crossing by a 10-carriage cargo train, the ministry said. The train will leave Munsan in the South at 9:00 am and reach Bongdong in the North before returning to Munsan at 2:00 pm, it said. Defence chiefs from both sides last week agreed to provide a security guarantee for the daily cross-border cargo train to run the 20-kilometre section of track across the heavily fortified border.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Did N. Korea give Syria nuclear aid?
2007-09-26
By Donald Kirk
Christian Science Monitor

Seoul - The US faces a dilemma going into the next round of six-nation talks on North Korea's nuclear weapons: how firmly to press North Korea for details of proliferation of its nuclear technology to foreign clients.

Ahead of the Thursday meeting in Beijing, the issue has assumed critical importance with revelations of an Israeli raid early this month on a Syrian base where North Koreans were suspected of imparting not only know-how but also materiel needed for Syria to develop nuclear warheads.

"The US government has some evidence, but they seem to be deciding now is not the right time to talk about it," says Kim Tae Woo, senior research fellow at the Institute of Defense Analyses, affiliated with the South Korean defense ministry.

Indeed, US officials have said almost nothing publicly about what was going on at the base near the Turkish border in northern Syria that according to media reports prompted Israel first to send in commandos and then to bomb it.

Mr. Kim believes that Syria's goal was to get "the technology for enrichment" of uranium, and that North Korea probably supplied uranium fluoride – the gaseous substance from which emerges the highly enriched uranium needed for nuclear warheads.

North Korea's expertise in highly enriched uranium raises another issue for negotiators to consider at the upcoming six-party talks: the exact status of North Korea's highly enriched uranium program.

The chief US envoy, Christopher Hill, says he hopes for "clarity" on the issue at this week's six-party talks at which North Korea's envoy, Kim Kye Hwan, is to list in detail all aspects of his country's nuclear program.

A top North Korean official acknowledged the existence of the program to a delegation to Pyongyang led by Mr. Hill's predecessor, James Kelly, in October 2002, but North Korea since then has denied anything to do with enriched uranium.

This week, North Korea may get around the issue of highly enriched uranium, according to analysts here, by admitting that it received advice, and perhaps some centrifuges, from Pakistan in the days when the Pakistan nuclear program was run by the since-disgraced physicist A.Q. Khan. North Korea can then say it never did anything more to develop warheads with uranium and the Pakistan relationship was short-lived and no longer exists.

North Korea may have more difficulty, however, explaining what was going on at the Syrian base. "The Israelis must have had pretty good evidence," says Robyn Lim, professor of international relations at Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan. "The US had to have been told in advance of the raid, and the Turks would have to have known in advance as well."

But why would North Korea have a team at the Syrian base while six-party talks are about to resume? "The connection with Syria is ongoing business," says Mr. Kim of the Institute of Defense Analyses. "It's not something that can be disconnected. The US must have been aware of that information for a long time."

Indeed, Syria maintains strong relations with North Korea. A Syrian delegation visited Pyongyang last week. "There's no doubt Syria has long been interested in the enrichment of uranium," says Kim. "The Syrian delegation in Pyongyang was probably talking about both nukes and missiles."

Professor Lim, a former Australian intelligence analyst, says while North Korea will "pretend to come clean" at the talks, the presumption is the North continues to export missiles to Middle Eastern countries and may well have also been selling nuclear secrets. She sees North Korea as participating in the talks for the sake of the enormous aid that's promised if the North convinces the US, South Korea, China, Russia, and Japan that it has abandoned its nuclear program. "The talks are designed just to keep enough aid flowing to prop up the regime," she says.

Analysts doubt, however, that the six-party talks will fail despite the issues of proliferation and highly enriched uranium. North Korea has already shut down its five-megawatt reactor at its nuclear complex at Yongbyon where it's believed to have made up to a dozen warheads, including one that it detonated last October in its only nuclear test to date.

Mr. Hill "will have no other option" but to raise the issue of proliferation in the talks, says Kim Song Han, a professor at Korea University. Nonetheless, he says, the priority will be to make North Korea disable its Yongbyon facilities, which made warheads with plutonium at their core. "If the US pushes North Korea to be more detailed," Professor Kim says, "North Korea will react very harshly."

This week's talks will help set the stage for next week's North-South Korean summit in Pyongyang at which South Korea's President Roh Moo Hyun is to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. Mr. Roh says he wants to pursue a "peace system" with North Korea while talking only briefly about the nuclear issue since it's already "being resolved."

Kim predicts North Korea will go through with disablement of its facilities at Yongbyon but remains "pessimistic" about dismantlement – the final stage – and is not certain if inspectors will ever see facilities elsewhere, including the site of the underground nuclear test.
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Afghanistan
SK: Ex-hostages say Taliban beat them for refusing to convert
2007-09-03
SEOUL (AFP) — Some of the South Korean Christian aid workers held hostage by Afghanistan's Taliban said they were beaten for refusing to convert to Islam and protecting female captives, a hospital chief said Monday.

"We found through medical checks that some male hostages were beaten," Cha Seung-Gyun told reporters after the 19 freed aid workers -- 14 women and five men -- underwent examinations at a hospital outside Seoul.

They had returned home Sunday after six weeks in captivity. "They said they were beaten at first for refusing to take part in Islamic prayers or for rejecting a demand to convert," Cha said.

The disclosure was likely to increase public sympathy for the ex-hostages, mostly in their 20s and 30s, following increasing criticism of what was seen as a reckless trip to a war-torn devoutly Islamic nation.

President Roh Moo-Hyun on Monday ordered that the former captives repay some of the costs of their rescue, which followed a deal between South Korean government negotiators in Afghanistan and the hardline Islamic insurgents.

The hospital chief said two male hostages, Je Chang-Hee and Song Byung-Woo, were beaten or threatened with death whey they refused to move out of a dugout shelter and leave some of their female colleagues behind.

But Cha said medical checks on the women showed no signs of rape, and they did not report having been sexually assaulted.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Report: U.S. to make peace with NKors by September
2007-05-19
SEOUL — The United States is willing to sign a peace treaty with North Korea to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War by September, the U.S. ambassador to South Korea reportedly told lawmakers here.

U.S. Ambassador Alexander Vershbow said Washington hopes to complete a process of normalizing diplomatic ties with Pyongyang, according to Kim Jong-Yul from the ruling Uri Party. Kim released to local media a transcript that had been translated into Korean following a May 9 closed-door meeting between Vershbow and five Uri Party lawmakers, including Rep. Kim Hyuk-Kyu, a close confidant of President Roh Moo-Hyun.

The meeting was arranged to discuss security policies after a recent visit to North Korea by a group of Uri lawmakers led by Kim Hyuk-Kyu. The lawmakers said they conveyed North Korea's denuclearization commitment to Vershbow at the meeting.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Strains growing with SKor over relocation of frontline, 'tripwire' U.S. troops
2007-01-18
From East Asia Intel, subscription
SEOUL — In a sign of the widening gap in the security alliance between the two countries, the top U.S. military commander in South Korea has vowed to "fight" any effort to delay relocating American troops to a new major base south of Seoul.

Some military analysts warn the relocation of U.S. troops could fuel security risks on the peninsula. The frontline American troops have long been regarded as a "tripwire" that could automatically lead to full-scale U.S. involvement in case of an invasion by North Korea.

"I am opposed to any decision to stretch this out for any reasons, whether it's political or it's fiscal . . . or whatever it is," Gen. B.B. Bell, commander of the U.S. Forces Korea (USFK), told journalists.

He called for the expansion of Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek, 70 kilometers south of Seoul, to be completed by 2008 as scheduled to house some 30,000 American troops.

But South Korea said last month it would not be able to complete the expansion of the U.S. base by 2008 due to protests by residents and a dispute over cost sharing. Seoul's Defense Ministry said the relocation could be delayed until as late as 2013.
SKor govt dragging it out.
The expansion of Camp Humphreys is the key component in the realignment of U.S. bases in South Korea. Under a 2004 accord, the United States would redeploy the frontline U.S. ground forces in one of the most significant changes in U.S. force structure in this country since the 1950-53 Korean War.

The delay comes amid high military tension following the North's nuclear and missile tests last year. Some military analysts here warn the North may stage a limited war on the South to break the standoff over international sanctions.
I don't know how much limited the war would be once it got started.
Bell became emotional at the news conference saying he was surprised by Seoul media reports that the base relocation would be delayed, indicating that he learned the news from media reports rather than from official military-to-military channels.
Well, it was an akward thing to bring up, so the SKors just let the press do it.
Bell said U.S. soldiers in the South badly need new facilities for a "normal life" with their families.

"Any further delay in our consolidation efforts at Camp Humphreys concerns me," said Bell, who serves as chief of the South Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command (CFC) and the United Nations Command (UNC). "I do not want to see any further delays and it's simply not right," he said. "I will fight this."
I hope he is backed up by the Pentagon and the Administration.
His angry protest embarrassed South Korean officials who are pushing to regain wartime control of South Korean troops from the United States.

South Korea voluntarily put the operational control of its military under the U.S.-led UN Command shortly after the Korean War broke out in 1950. It took back peacetime operational control in 1994, but wartime operational control remains in the hands of the top U.S. commander here.
If you want wartime control, we can always leave and you can have it all.
President Roh Moo-Hyun has pushed for regaining wartime control by 2012 as part of efforts to bolster the country's self-defense posture.
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China-Japan-Koreas
NKorean nuclear talks end in deadlock, finger-pointing
2006-12-22
Surrrrrrrprise surprise surprise...
BEIJING (AFP) - Six-nation talks aimed at persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear arms program closed in deadlock, with the United States and the North blaming each other for the impasse.

The latest round of talks wrapped up after five days of meetings with no progress made and no date set for another round.

The negotiations snagged on North Korea's refusal to engage in substantive discussions until the United States lifted financial sanctions imposed last year which have frozen millions of dollars of North Korean funds in a Macau bank.

North Korea's chief negotiator Kim Kye-Gwan blamed a "hostile" US policy toward Pyongyang for the failure of the talks."I feel the United States has not yet decided to lift sanctions and abandon its hostile policy against us," Kim told a press conference after the talks ended."It is clear who should be responsible for the failure to have substantive discussions."

The six nations -- China, the two Koreas, the United States, Japan and Russia -- had resumed the intermittent, three-year-old forum this week hoping to make real progress toward a denuclearized Korean peninsula.

But following its first-ever atomic test on October 9, an emboldened North Korea unveiled a long list of demands at the opening of the talks, which it had boycotted for the previous 13 months.

The chief US envoy to the talks, Christopher Hill, placed the blame squarely on North Korea, accusing its envoy of not having the authority to negotiate on the nuclear issue."Certainly we expected him to have the authority to negotiate on the six-party talks. We also had the expectation that BDA (frozen North Korean accounts in Macau's Banco Delta Asia) would be addressed in a separate mechanism that the treasury department on our side was handling. The DPRK (North Korea) had made a point that they wanted the financial issue to be discussed and resolved, but there was never an agreement or understanding that that had to be done ... in the first round of renewed six-party talks."

Hill said he was "disappointed that we did not come out with a clear agreement" but was confident of talks resuming soon. "We are talking weeks, not months," he said."We'll see where we are and try to regroup and see if we can go in the next few weeks."

Earlier Friday, Hill had said North Korea had refused to consider undisclosed US proposals to end the crisis earlier in the week.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called Friday for the world to unite to pressure North Korea."The international community needs to unite and implement the UN resolution in order to lead North Korea to take specific actions," Abe said, referring to UN sanctions triggered by the October test explosion."The North Koreans need to realize that they won't solve such problems as the serious food issue -- in which many of its people suffer from a shortage of daily food -- unless they solve (the nuclear issue)."

However in remarks released on Friday, South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun accused the United States of being partly to blame for the standoff. Roh said the United States wrecked a six-party deal struck in September last year in which the North agreed to give up its nuclear program in return for security guarantees and aid. He said the United States' imposition of the financial sanctions just a few days before that deal angered the North, and suggested the timing may not have been a coincidence. "If you look at it in a bad light, you may say (the two US departments) were playing a pre-arranged game," he said, in reference to the US State Department, which is involved in the six-party talks, and Treasury, which imposed the sanctions.

In a closing statement at the end of the talks, China's delegate Wu Dawei said only that the six participants had recommitted to previous broad goals. "The parties... reaffirmed their common goal and will to achieve the peaceful goal of denuclearization of the Korean peninsula through dialogue," he said.

Aside from the US financial sanctions issue, North Korea this week demanded the lifting of the separate UN sanctions and insisted on aid to build a nuclear reactor for power.

North Korea's envoy Kim said defiantly on Friday that Pyongyang would not back down from its demand that the financial sanctions be lifted. "The United States is applying both carrots and sticks in parallel. We stand up to the US with dialogue and a shield, the shield being a strengthening of our (military) deterrent," he said.
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