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US will never accept a nuclear-armed NKorea: Gates

Gates holds security talks in Seoul after warning NKorea
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Thursday holds talks with his South Korean counterpart a day after issuing a stern warning over North Korea's nuclear programme. Gates was due to meet South Korean Defence Minister Kim Tae-Young as part of an annual Security Consultative Meeting likely to focus on the threat posed by North Korea and the development of Seoul's military. The US defence chief on Wednesday said his government would never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea and described Pyongyang's atomic and missile programmes as a "lethal and destabilising" threat. "There should be no mistaking that we do not today, nor will we ever, accept a North Korea with nuclear weapons," Gates told US and South Korean soldiers at the start of his visit. The security talks come after North Korea began making peace overtures to Seoul and Washington after staging a second nuclear test and firing missiles earlier this year. Despite the conciliatory signals, the North last week test-fired short-range missiles and warned South Korea of a potential naval clash on their disputed border. North Korea quit six-party nuclear disarmament talks in April. The regime has indicated its willingness to return to multilateral talks but only if it first holds discussions with the United States alone. Gates was also expected to discuss South Korea's contribution to the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan as well as Seoul's preparations to take over wartime operational control of its troops by 2012. Seoul relinquished command over its troops to the United States during the 1950-53 Korean War and regained peacetime control in 1994. US officials and commanders say Seoul is on track to meet the April 2012 deadline. The US stations some 28,500 troops to bolster South Korea's 655,000-strong armed forces against the North's 1.2 million-member military. It also guarantees a "nuclear umbrella" over its long-time ally in case of atomic attack. After his talks in Seoul, Gates travels to Bratislava for a NATO meeting of defence ministers that will be dominated by the troubled war effort in Afghanistan.

China urges nations not to give up on NKorea nuke solution
China on Wednesday urged countries involved in talks to put an end to North Korea's nuclear programmes not to give up on efforts to resolve the stand-off. The North Korean nuclear issue "is not a simple issue, it cannot be solved overnight... but no party should give up efforts," assistant foreign minister Hu Zhengyue told reporters. During a visit by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao to Pyongyang early this month, North Korea said it was willing to return to six-nation denuclearisation talks, but only if it first was granted direct negotiations with the United States. Washington has said it would agree to bilateral talks within the framework of the six-party forum, but that the goal must be a complete end to Pyongyang's nuclear weapons drive. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday during a visit to Seoul that Washington would never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea. The six-party forum, which North Korea abandoned in April, is chaired by China, and includes the two Koreas, Japan, Russia and the United States. Hu said China would brief Asian leaders at a regional summit beginning Friday in Thailand about recent developments on the North Korean nuclear issue. "Our goal is to relax the situation, mitigate the tensions and revive the six-party talks, to make early progress in the six-party talks," he said. A summit between the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) will be followed by a meeting with partner nations Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea, attended by Wen. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Oct 21, 2009
The United States will never have "normal, sanctions-free relations" with a nuclear-armed North Korea, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Wednesday as she demanded its full atomic disarmament.

In a speech about the US quest for a nuclear-free world, Clinton tackled suspicions that North Korea intends only to use negotiations with the United States and other powers to become a recognized atomic weapons state.

The top US diplomat said President Barack Obama's administration remained open to one-on-one talks with North Korea within the context of six-party negotiations, suspended for the last six months.

North Korea, after a tense months-long showdown marked by an underground nuclear weapons test and a series of rocket launches, has recently signaled it wants direct talks with the United States.

"But North Korea's return to the negotiating table is not enough," Clinton told a gathering of foreign policy experts organized by the United States Institute of Peace, a think tank.

"Current sanctions will not be relaxed until Pyongyang takes verifiable, irreversible steps toward complete denuclearization," Clinton said.

"Its leaders should be under no illusion that the United States will ever have normal, sanctions-free relations with a nuclear-armed North Korea," she added.

Besides the United States, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan have taken part in the six-party talks, which North Korea quit in April after the United Nations censured it for a long-range rocket launch.

Clinton also repeated that the new administration's diplomatic engagement with Iran over its disputed nuclear program cannot be "open-ended."

Along with the four other permanent members of the UN Security Council -- Russia, China, France and Britain -- plus Germany, the Obama administration opened talks with Iran three weeks ago in a bid to halt Tehran's uranium enrichment program.

Iran rejects Western allegations that it aims to build a nuclear bomb, saying the program is for peaceful nuclear energy.

Clinton put Tehran and Pyongyang at the heart of Obama's worldwide quest to banish atomic arms that he revealed in Prague in April.

She called for bolstering the IAEA watchdog after saying it lacked "the tools or authority to carry out its mission effectively," citing its failure to detect Iran's covert uranium enrichment plant near Qom and Syria's alleged reactor.

In 2007, Israeli warplanes bombed Syria's alleged nuclear plant.

The IAEA, the International Atomic Energy Agency, should "be given new authorities, such as the ability to investigate nuclear weapons-related activities even when no nuclear materials are present," she said.

"And if we expect the IAEA to be a bulwark of the non-proliferation regime, we must also give it the resources necessary to do its job," the secretary said.

In a statement from its Washington embassy, Syria said it "is a signatory to the NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty) and has abided by all its obligations under this treaty, regardless of the false accusations leveled by some circles."

Damascus urged the new administration to adopt a Syrian-sponsored UN resolution declaring the entire Middle East a region free of weapons of mass destruction, as well as to press US ally Israel to sign the NPT.

Under the treaty that took effect in 1970, nuclear powers are forbidden from transferring nuclear weapons or helping other states from acquiring them.

"Stopping terrorists from acquiring the ultimate weapon was not a central preoccupation when the NPT was negotiated," Clinton said. "But today, it is. And it must remain at the top of our national security priorities."

Clinton also said US negotiations with Russia for a successor to the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), which expires December 5, would enhance both US and world security.

The chief US diplomat also renewed the administration's commitment to obtain Congressional ratification of a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).

Six countries -- the United States, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, China and Egypt -- have signed but not ratified the pact.

North Korea, India and Pakistan have not signed it and all three have carried out nuclear tests since 1996.

earlier related report
NKorea sanctions to end with full denuclearization: Clinton
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that sanctions against North Korea will only be relaxed when Pyongyang takes "verifiable and irreversible" steps for full nuclear disarmament.

In a speech that put curbing North Korea's and Iran's nuclear ambitions at the center of a US quest for a nuclear-free world, Clinton also called for a strengthened UN watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The chief US diplomat saved some of her toughest words for North Korea, which bolted six-party nuclear disarmament talks after it tested a long-range rocket in April. Pyongyang then tested a nuclear weapon, its second, in May.

"Thwarting the nuclear ambitions of North Korea and Iran would shore up the non-proliferation regime," the chief US diplomat told foreign policy experts gathered by the United States Institute for Peace at a Washington hotel.

She renewed US support for face-to-face talks with North Korea provided the Stalinist regime of Kim Jong-il resumes the six-party negotiations.

Besides the United States and North Korea, the partners are China, Russia, South Korea and Japan.

"But North Korea's return to the negotiating table is not enough," she said.

"Current sanctions will not be relaxed until Pyongyang takes verifiable, irreversible steps toward complete denuclearization," Clinton said.

"Its leaders should be under no illusion that the United States will ever have normal, sanctions-free relations with a nuclear-armed North Korea," she added.

Many analysts suspect North Korea seeks to become a nuclear weapons state, mainly as a strategy to ensure the regime survives.

She also repeated that President Barack Obama's diplomatic engagement with Iran over its disputed nuclear program cannot be "open-ended."

Along with the four other UN Security Council permanent members -- Russia, China, France and Britain -- plus Germany, the Obama administration opened talks with Iran October 1 in a bid to halt Tehran's uranium enrichment program.

Iran rejects Western allegations that it aims to build a nuclear bomb, saying the program is for peaceful nuclear energy.

And she called for bolstering the IAEA's authority and increasing its resources.

"The IAEA should make full use of existing verification authorities, including special inspections," Clinton said.

"But it should also be given new authorities, such as the ability to investigate nuclear weapons-related activities even when no nuclear materials are present," she said.

"And if we expect the IAEA to be a bulwark of the non-proliferation regime, we must also give it the resources necessary to do its job," the secretary said.

A new review conference for the Non-Proliferation Treaty is scheduled for next year. Under the treaty, nuclear powers are forbidden from transferring nuclear weapons or helping other states from acquiring them.

She said US negotiations with Russia for a successor to the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) would enhance not only world security but US security. The treaty expires December 5.

The talks, which strictly limits US and Russian arsenals and is seen as a cornerstone of Cold War-era strategic arms control, made little progress under former US president George W. Bush.

The chief US diplomat renewed the administration's commitment to obtain Congressional ratification of a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).

Six countries -- the United States, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, China and Egypt -- have signed but not ratified the pact. North Korea, India and Pakistan have not signed it and all three have carried out nuclear tests since 1996.

"A test ban treaty that has entered into force will allow the United States and others to challenge states engaged in suspicious testing activities -- including the option of calling on-site inspections to be sure that no testing occurs anywhere," she said.

Her speech outlined key steps toward achieving Obama's vision -- enunciated in Prague earlier this year -- for a world purged of nuclear weapons.

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Seoul sees NKorea uranium programme as 'very worrying'
Seoul (AFP) Oct 19, 2009
South Korea Monday described North Korea's admission of an enriched uranium nuclear weapons programme as a "very worrying" development and questioned whether the country is committed to disarming. "North Korea indicated in a letter to the UN Security Council chairman that it had attempted to enrich uranium and succeeded to a degree," Foreign Minister Yu Myung-Hwan told reporters. ... read more







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