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ID128066
Title ProperN. Korea lays out conditions for talks
LanguageENG
AuthorDavenport, Kelsey
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)North Korea indicated last month that it may be willing to suspend nuclear and ballistic missile tests if abandoned talks with a group of five countries over Pyongyang's nuclear activities resume. In an official commentary released by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Oct. 9, Pyongyang suggested that it would make this commitment after the talks restart, "not as a precondition" to resume negotiations. Satellite launches would also be exempt, KCNA reported. The so-called six-party talks, which include China, Japan, Russia, South Korea, and the United States, began in 2003 and continued intermittently until 2008, when North Korea said it would no longer participate. A South Korean official said in an Oct. 28 interview that North Korea made a similar offer at an informal meeting with former U.S. officials in Berlin in September, according to his briefing on the meeting. The South Korean government was not represented at the meeting, nor were any current U.S. officials present, he said. North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho represented Pyongyang. The official, however, expressed doubt about the sincerity of North Korea's offer, saying that North Korea "often reneges" on verbal and written agreements
`In' analytical NoteArms Control Today Vol. 43, No.9; November 2013: p.33
Journal SourceArms Control Today Vol. 43, No.9; November 2013: p.33
Key WordsNorth Korea ;  South Korea ;  Korean Central News Agency - KCNA ;  China ;  Japan ;  Russia ;  Berlin Summit - 2008 ;  Korean Nuclear Policy ;  Bilateral Relations ;  Bilateral Negotiation ;  Korean Defence Policy ;  Korean Strategy ;  Pyongyang Strategy