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US says North Korea should not 'aggravate tensions'

The ballistic missiles -- which the North is banned from firing under UN resolutions -- were launched into the Sea of Japan.

Israeli minister 'concerned' about US response to NKorea
An Israeli minister on Saturday said he was "very concerned" about the US response to North Korea's test-launch of a series of missiles and Washington's stance towards Iran's nuclear programme. "I am very concerned about the United States' reaction to North Korea's gross provocation," Trade and Industry Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer said in a speech delivered outside Tel Aviv. The US State Department had warned Pyongyang not to "aggravate tensions" after North Korea test-fired seven missiles off its eastern coast earlier Saturday, according to South Korean officials. The move appeared to be intended to coincide with US Independence Day celebrations and violated UN resolutions. Ben-Eliezer went on to accuse the United States and the international community of failing to take a hard enough line on Iran's nuclear ambitions, which Israel sees as the greatest threat to its security. "I am not reassured by the lax US position on Iran," he said. "The world is playing both sides. By day there are UN resolutions and at night there are thousands of European companies trading with Iran, and (Iranian President Mahmoud) Ahmadinejad is laughing at us," he said. Israel, the region's sole if undeclared nuclear-armed state, has long been alarmed by Tehran's nuclear enrichment programme and Ahmadinejad's repeated predictions of the demise of the Jewish state. Israel and the West have long accused Iran of racing to build atomic weapons under the guise of a peaceful nuclear energy programme, charges vehemently denied by Tehran.

UN sanctions effectively pressuring NKorea: US navy
The chief of US naval operations said Saturday fresh UN sanctions were preventing North Korea from transporting suspected weapons overseas, according to local media. Admiral Gary Roughead, visiting Japan, noted that a North Korean ship tracked by the US Navy and suspected of transporting weapons has turned around because countries in the region were refusing its port call. "What we are seeing is the effect of the UN Security Council Resolution that was put into effect," Roughead told local media, according to Japanese public broadcaster NHK. Earlier this week, a Pentagon official said the Kang Nam 1, which had been reportedly bound for Myanmar with weapons or military technology, had turned back after the US Navy began tracking it. Tougher sanctions, imposed in response to the North's May nuclear test, call on UN member states to inspect cargoes if they suspect they are banned weapons shipments to or from the North. Pyongyang responded defiantly, vowing to build more nuclear bombs. Japan, along with the United States, pushed hard for tough sanctions after the North's long-range rocket launch on April 5 and its second underground atomic test on May 25. On Tuesday Washington ordered sanctions on an Iranian-based firm for allegedly aiding the North's missile programme, and accused the two nations of joint arms proliferation.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 4, 2009
The United States urged North Korea on Saturday not to "aggravate tensions" as it slammed Pyongyang's latest missile test, apparently timed for the US Independence Day holiday, as "not helpful."

"North Korea should refrain from actions that aggravate tensions and focus on denuclearization talks and the implementation of its commitments from the September 19, 2005 joint statement," said State Department spokesman Karl Duckworth.

"This type of North Korean behavior is not helpful," he told AFP after North Korea test-fired seven missiles off its east coast earlier Saturday, according to South Korean officials.

The ballistic missiles -- which the North is banned from firing under UN resolutions -- were launched into the Sea of Japan.

It was the biggest salvo of ballistic weaponry since the North fired a long-range Taepodong-2 and six smaller missiles on US Independence Day in 2006.

Under the 2005 agreement, North Korea promised to give up its nuclear program in exchange for a US pledge not to attack or invade it and to work toward normalized relations.

The United States and other parties to the agreement -- China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea -- also offered to put together an energy package for North Korea.

But North Korea announced last April that it was walking out of the six-party talks and resuming operation of its nuclear facilities.

Pyongyang conducted its second nuclear test in May.

"What North Korea needs to do is fulfill its international obligations and commitments," Duckworth said, adding that North Korean missile launches "highlight the importance of fully implementing the provisions of the UN resolutions."

Professor Kim Yong-Hyun of Seoul's Dongguk University said the launches were clearly timed to coincide with US Independence Day.

"This is a thinly veiled warning to the United States and the international community that it may launch long-range missiles next time," he said.

Chinese officials and their Russian counterparts said Saturday after a meeting in Moscow that both countries are "convinced" there is no alternative to the six-party talks.

The negotiations are an "efficient instrument to resolve the nuclear problem on the Korean peninsula," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement.

A US delegation met this week with Chinese officials for talks on implementing UN sanctions imposed on North Korea.

Delegation head Philip Goldberg -- the State Department's point man on coordinating implementation of the sanctions -- told reporters on Thursday he had "very good discussions" in Beijing.

"We intend to implement these resolutions with the overall goal of returning to a path of denuclearization and nonproliferation on the Korean peninsula."

US embassy spokesman Richard Buangan said Goldberg met with officials from China's foreign ministry.

China, which supported the UN resolution, has been criticized by the United States in the past for lacking enthusiasm for implementing UN sanctions against North Korea, its neighbor and ally.

In Israel, Trade and Industry Minister Benjamin Ben-Elizer blasted the US reponse to the latest missile launches.

"I am very concerned about the United States' reaction to North Korea's gross provocation," Ben-Eliezer said in a speech delivered outside Tel Aviv.

earlier related report
No alternative to talks on N.Korea nuclear programme: Russia
Russia and China are convinced that there is no alternative to six-party talks to stop North Korea's nuclear programme, the Russian foreign ministry said Saturday after a meeting with Chinese officials.

"The two sides are convinced that there is no alternative to the six-party negotiations which are an efficient instrument to resolve the nuclear problem on the Korean peninsula," the ministry said in a statement.

The talks, involving South and North Korea, China, Japan, Russia and the United States began in August 2003 but Pyongyang pulled out of the dialogue in April after being sanctioned by the UN Security Council for a missile test.

The statement came hours after North Korea test-fired seven missiles off its east coast, according to South Korean officials, in an act of defiance apparently timed for the US Independence Day holiday.

The launches further fuelled regional tensions after the communist state's nuclear test in May, which coincided with the US Memorial Day holiday.

They came as Washington seeks support for tough enforcement of United Nations sanctions aimed at shutting down the North's nuclear and missile programmes.

The United States urged North Korea on Saturday not to "aggravate tensions" as it called Pyongyang's latest missile as "not helpful".

"North Korea should refrain from actions that aggravate tensions and focus on denuclearization talks and the implementation of its commitments from the September 19, 2005 joint statement," said State Department spokesman Karl Duckworth.

"This type of North Korean behavior is not helpful," he told AFP.

The ballistic missiles -- which the North is banned from firing under UN resolutions -- were launched into the Sea of Japan.

Under the 2005 agreement, North Korea promised to give up its nuclear programme in exchange for a US pledge not to attack or invade it and to work toward normalized relations.

The United States and other parties to the agreement -- China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea -- also offered to put together an energy package for North Korea.

But North Korea announced last April that it was walking out of the six-party talks and resuming operation of its nuclear facilities.

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Two Koreas fail to agree in talks on joint project
Seoul (AFP) July 2, 2009
North and South Korea failed to reach agreement in talks Thursday about the fate of their last major joint business project, amid high cross-border tensions and the North's continuing nuclear standoff with the world. The two sides could not narrow differences and did not set a date for the next round, Seoul's unification ministry said. The meeting at the Kaesong joint industrial estate ... read more







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