China-Japan-Koreas | |
Ban Ki-Moon: Rice Should Talk with North Korea | |
2006-10-15 | |
Oct. 15, 2006 - U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice should have diplomatic talks with North Korea, U.N. Secretary-General-Designate Ban Ki-moon told Bill Weir on Sunday's "Good Morning America Weekend Edition." "If possible it would be a good opportunity," he said. "The United States has expressed on many occasions that they will be prepared to talk with North Korea if and when they return to six party talks. ... I hope North Korea will take this opportunity to discuss all their concerns." The United Nations Security Council unanimously passed a resolution Saturday that will impose harsh sanctions against North Korea just six days after Kim Jong Il's rogue regime declared that it conducted an underground nuclear test. The Security Council said the North Korean test amounted to a "clear threat to international peace and security." Immediately after the vote, North Korean Ambassador Pak Gil Yon addressed the Council and rejected the U.N. vote, calling it a "gangster-like action."
"This is very much regrettable that North Korea declared the rejection," Ban Ki-moon said Sunday. The foreign minister said he "hopes North Korea will comply fully to [the] resolutions." | |
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China-Japan-Koreas | ||||
UN imposes stringent sanctions | ||||
2006-10-15 | ||||
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Wang Guangya, China's UN ambassador, told the council Beijing still opposed interdiction and urged nations not to take "provocative steps." The resolution also drops a ban on all arms going to North Korea, but it puts an embargo on all large-sized conventional arms. In Washington, a US intelligence analysis showed radioactivity in air samples collected near the suspected nuclear test site, a US official said on Friday, five days after Pyongyang announced it conducted the test. "That's right, though this is only a first look. People have been saying all along that the working assumption is it was a nuke," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. US President George Bush had used his weekly radio address to the nation to urge world powers to pass tough sanctions on North Korea and said Pyongyang must face "real consequences" for the nuclear weapons test. With China fearing a flood of refugees from a sudden collapse of North Korea, which was sorely tested yet survived the demise of the Soviet Union, the death of its founder and a famine that may have killed 10% of its people in the 1990s, some questioned what impact any sanctions would have.
Kim, the architect of South Korea's engagement policy with the North, blamed US policy in part for the nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula, which he said could only end if Washington held direct talks with Pyongyang leaders. "The United States must talk to North Korea," Kim said in an email interview. "We have to talk not only with friends but also with enemies, if necessary." US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will visit China, Japan and South Korea from October 17 to 22. A US official said Rice would also likely travel to Russia during the trip. Those five countries had been engaging North Korea in the "six-party talks" aimed at getting North Korea to abandon its nuclear program in exchange for aid and security guarantees. Highlights of the UN resolution: Calls upon countries to take "co-operative" action through inspection of cargo to and from North Korea to prevent illicit trafficking in nuclear, chemical or biological weapons and related materials. | ||||
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China-Japan-Koreas | ||
North Korea totally rejects UN sanctions | ||
2006-10-15 | ||
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He further accused the United States of preparing a pre-emptive strike on his country.
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China-Japan-Koreas | ||||
UN | ||||
2006-10-14 | ||||
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North Korea's UN envoy, Pak Gil Yon, left the UN chamber after rejecting the "unjustifiable" resolution and accusing the Security Council of neglecting US pressure on North Korea.
The resolution -- Demands North Korea eliminate all its nuclear weapons, weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles John Bolton, the US envoy to the UN, warned the Security Council that stronger measures might be required if North Korea did not comply. China and Russia have been concerned that the cargo inspections permitted in the resolution could spark naval confrontations with North Korean boats. Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov said that both Moscow and Beijing believed the sanctions should not be viewed as indefinite. "If North Korea returns to six-party talks and these talks achieve progress, sanctions... should be automatically lifted," he said. After hours of talks, China agreed to back the resolution but said it had "reservations" about provisions for cargo checks on North Korean ships. China's UN envoy Wang Guangya called on UN member states to adopt a "prudent and responsible attitude" and refrain from "provocative steps".
The US proposed the initial draft resolution but revised it to remove the threat of imminent military action and dilute a blanket ban on defence exports in an effort to allay Chinese and Russian concerns.
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China-Japan-Koreas |
N. Korea: UNSC should congratulate North Korea |
2006-10-10 |
![]() "It will be better for the Security Council of the United Nations to congratulate the DPRK scientists and researchers instead of doing such notorious, useless and rigorous resolutions or whatever," Pak said, referring to the North by its formal name, the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea. "The nuclear test in the DPRK will greatly contribute in increasing the world deterrence of the DPRK" and will contribute "to the maintenance and guarantee of peace and security in the peninsula and the region," he said. |
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China-Japan-Koreas |
U.N. Imposes Limited Sanctions on N. Korea |
2006-07-16 |
![]() The resolution bans all U.N. member states from selling material or technology for missiles or weapons of mass destruction to North Korea, and from receiving missiles, banned weapons or technology from Pyongyang. It condemns North Korea's multiple missile launches on July 5 and demands that North Korea "suspend all activities related to its ballistic missile program" and re-establish a moratorium on missile launches. It strongly urges North Korea to return to six-party talks on its nuclear program, which have been stalled since last September. North Korea's U.N. Ambassador Pak Gil Yon, who was in the Security Council chamber for the vote in a rare appearance, accused the council of trying to isolate his country, known officially as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or DPRK. "The delegation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea resolutely condemns the attempt of some countries to misuse the Security Council for the despicable political aim to isolate and put pressure on the DPRK, and totally rejects the resolution," he said. |
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China-Japan-Koreas | |
U.S., North Korea to Hold Talks in N.Y. | |
2006-02-24 | |
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. and North Korean officials will meet next month in New York to discuss a rift over Pyongyang's At the March 7 meeting, U.S. technical experts will brief a Foreign Ministry delegation from Pyongyang on U.S. laws that were applied when Washington imposed sanctions several months ago in response to counterfeiting and other U.S.
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Axis of Evil |
N. Korea Seeks Compromise on Nukes |
2002-10-26 |
Wrapping an offer in fiery rhetoric, North Korea said it was ready to cool tensions set off by the discovery of its nuclear program if Washington recognized the isolated nation's sovereignty and allowed it to flourish. When did we start giving a fart whether North Korea flourished or not? Dear Leader can rule his peasants and lackeys until he dies of old age in office, just like Great Leader did, and some other relative can take over. Let them enjoy their "sovereignty" and don't give them any of our tax dollars. Spend the money on more important things, like hard liquor and loose wimmin... Delivering the statement by his Foreign Ministry, Ambassador Pak Gil Yon on Friday charged the White House with preparing a pre-emptive strike against North Korea by including it in the "axis of evil," along with Iraq and Iran. "This is a clear declaration of war," Pak said. Sounds more like a clear definition of the problem... Even so, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea wants a "nonaggression treaty" with the United States, he said. In a rare news conference, he expressed hope that a series of contacts between the two governments would continue. Yeah, buddy! Those "nonaggression treaties" work pretty well, don't they? Hitler and Stalin used to have one... He spoke shortly before President Bush and Chinese President Jiang Zemin, meeting in Crawford, Texas, said they both oppose nuclear weapons on the Korean peninsula and pledged to seek a peaceful resolution of the crisis set off by North Korea's assertion that it is developing such weapons. Bush said he wanted to work with China, South Korea, Japan and Russia to come up with a common strategy to convince North Korean leader Kim Jong Il to disarm. Good idea. Dump the problem on them. They want to be regional powers, let them solve the problem... But Pak charged the United States with stockpiling nuclear weapons in South Korea that have threatened the North for nearly half a century. As a result, Pak said, North Korea "was left with no other proper answer to the U.S. behaving so arrogantly and impertinently." I love it when we're "impertinent." It makes me feel so... so... hegemonistic! |
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