Google – AFP, Jung Ha-Won (AFP), 16 June 2013
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North
Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (C) visits a restaurant in North Pyongan
province on
June 13, 2013 (KCNA/AFP/File, Kns)
|
SEOUL —
North Korea proposed high-level talks with the US on denuclearisation and
easing tensions on the Korean peninsula, just days after it abruptly cancelled
a rare meeting with the South.
Tension has
been high on the peninsula since the North's third nuclear test in February
that triggered new UN sanctions which ignited an angry response from Pyongyang,
including threats of nuclear attacks on Seoul and Washington.
A rare
high-level meeting between two Koreas scheduled for June 12 and 13, which would
have been the first between the two sides for six years, was cancelled on Tuesday
due to spats over protocol.
The latest
proposal came as the North was under increasing pressure to abandon its atomic
arsenal and its belligerent behaviour, not only from the US and its ally the
South, but also Pyongyang's sole major ally, China.
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North
Korean delegate Kim Song-Hye (L)
shakes hands with her South Korean
counterpart Chun Hae-Sung on June 9,
2013 (South Korean Unification Ministry/
AFP/ File)
|
The North
is willing to have "broad and in-depth discussions" on issues such as
the building of "a world without nuclear weapons" being promoted by
US President Barack Obama, it said, inviting the US to set the time and venue
for the meeting.
"If
the US has true intent on defusing tensions on the Korean Peninsula and
ensuring peace and security in the US mainland and the region, it should not
raise preconditions for dialogue and contact," it said.
Analysts
said Washington was unlikely to accept the latest proposal without any concrete
action from Pyongyang to move towards denuclearisation -- a pre-condition for
any talks long demanded by the US.
Glyn
Davies, the US pointman on North Korea policy, last week repeated calls for the
North to take steps to end its nuclear programme and warned that this year's
crisis increased Washington's hesitancy to engage again.
"The
US has repeatedly made it clear that it was not interested in a dialogue for
the sake of dialogue," said Yang Moo-Jin, a professor at the University
North Korean Studies in Seoul.
"So
I'm not sure if Washington will respond to the talks offer, especially if it
was made without any behind-the-curtain negotiations between Pyongyang and
Washington in advance," he said.
In another
move to step up pressure on Pyongyang, chief nuclear envoys of the US, the
South and Japan are to meet in Washington on Wednesday to discuss ways to
resume the long-stalled six-nation nuclear disarmament talks on the North.
The
nuclear-armed communist state said in Sunday's statement that it was committed
to denuclearisation of the peninsula but defended its atomic arsenal as
"self-defence" against what it called military and nuclear threats
from the US.
"The
legitimate status of the (North) as a nuclear weapons state will go on... until...
the nuclear threats from outside are put to a final end," it said, urging
the US to also scrap all sanctions against it.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping, who agreed at a summit with Obama earlier this month that
the North must give up its nuclear arsenal, is also to hold talks with the
South's leader Park Geun-Hye on June 27.
"The
North is hard-pressed to show some kind of reconciliatory gestures to avoid
being further isolated in this dynamic, especially by China," said Kim
Yong-Hyun, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University.
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