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China-Japan-Koreas
Norks say sanctions must be lifted before nuclear talks resume
2010-01-19
SEOUL, Jan. 18 (Yonhap) -- North Korea reaffirmed its stance Monday that it will not return to international negotiations on its nuclear arms programs unless sanctions on it are removed.

The statement by an unnamed Foreign Ministry spokesperson came less than a week after the U.S. said the removal of sanctions can only be considered after the North returns to the six-nation talks that also group South Korea, Japan, China and Russia.

If North Korea "goes out for the six-party talks, remaining subjected to the sanctions, such talks will not prove to be equal," it said in the statement carried by its official Korean Central News Agency, pledging it will "never allow this to happen."

North Korea, which last week proposed talks on formally ending the 1950-53 Korean War, also reiterated its demand that they be started to help move forward the six-party talks. "There will be a starting point of confidence building only if the parties concerned sit at a negotiating table for concluding a peace treaty," it said.

It added that a peace treaty to formally close the war that involved the U.S. on the South Korean side and China on the North Korean side will help "put an end to such vicious cycle of distrust and build confidence to push forward denuclearization."

North Korea "is not opposed to the six-party talks and has no ground whatsoever to delay them," it said. The country had declared the talks "dead" after it drew U.N. condemnation for its rocket launch seen as a test of ballistic missile technology in April last year. North Korea conducted its second nuclear test less than two weeks later.

Defending its rocket launch as an act of sovereignty, North Korea said it is "nonsensical" to "sit at the negotiating table with those countries that violate its sovereignty."

"Such extreme encroachment upon the sovereignty of a country" has compelled the North to go ahead with its nuclear test, it said. "If the six-party talks are to take place again, it is necessary to seek whatever way of removing the factor of torpedoing them."
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Send him the answer with a large thermonuclear warhead attached. Preferably a surprise present.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2010-01-19 17:37  

#4  Short answer? No.
Posted by: mojo   2010-01-19 10:44  

#3  Ship Kimmie a box of tasty rocks. Wrapped with a pretty bow.
Posted by: ed   2010-01-19 07:43  

#2  You'll never find anyone better at the "you give me something, I give you nothing" than the Communists ...
Posted by: Steve White   2010-01-19 07:37  

#1  IOW, we give up our best bargaining chip in return for the 'favor' of talks.

Not a bad gambit at all- it's worked before.
Posted by: Free Radical   2010-01-19 06:47  

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