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China-Japan-Koreas |
Prospects for N. Korea Nuke Talks Brighten |
2004-04-23 |
Yeah, but it was just the flash from that train explosion. Thu Apr 22, 2:00 PM ET By SOO-JEONG LEE, Associated Press Writer SEOUL, South Korea - Prospects for In North Korea’s first confirmation of Kim’s secretive The countries are to convene a third round of talks in July aimed at persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program. Previous rounds have made "Noting that the DPRK remained unchanged DPRK stands for the During Kim’s visit, China pledged Aside from KCNA said Kim invited Hu to visit North Korea and Hu accepted. It’s not who you know, but Hu Yao Bang. In Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesman The United States and other countries hope North Korea needs Two fuel trains |
Posted by:Zenster |
#4 Easy, Jen, I like the strikeouts :-) |
Posted by: Steve White 2004-04-23 11:33:37 AM |
#3 Oh, and Strike-out King, it was your boys--Clinton and Carter--that handled the I suppose you're now demanding that he act preemptively, but then you'll be one of those Liberals who'll howl that Bush is a warmonger when he does. |
Posted by: Jen 2004-04-23 8:19:17 AM |
#2 Too many strike-outs; knew it had to be Zipster. |
Posted by: Jen 2004-04-23 8:15:33 AM |
#1 A newspaper out of Chosun is reporting that when Cheney went to China not long ago, he told the Chinese that if they could not stop NK's nuke program, the US could not stop Japan's or Taiwan's. Don't know how true it is, but sounds about right. |
Posted by: Ben 2004-04-23 4:39:19 AM |