Seoul urges NKorea to drop nuke, missile ambitions
SKOREA: South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak Sunday urged North Korea
to drop its nuclear-weapon and missile ambitions and called for
"unconditional" inter-Korean talks amid rising tensions.
His remarks came as the North was defiantly preparing to test-launch
what US and South Korean officials say is a long-range ballistic missile
amid deadlocked nuclear disarmament talks.
Pyongyang has also ratcheted cross-border tensions since declaring an
"all-out confrontation" with Seoul, arguing over inter-Korean military
borders.
"What really protects North Korea is not nuclear weapons and
missiles, but cooperation with South Korea and with the international
community," Lee said in a speech marking the 90th anniversary of
Koreans' civil uprising against the Japanese colonial rule.
"Denuclearisation is a shortcut for North Korea to become a member of
the international community and develop fast."
Lee repeated that Seoul was willing to help and talk with Pyongyang.
"The door for unconditional dialogue is still open wide now. The South
and the North should talk at an early date," he added. The North appears
to have begun assembling a rocket which it claims will launch a
satellite, Seoul's Yonhap news reported Friday, despite US and South
Korean warnings to halt what they see as a planned missile test.
The launch may come in late March or early April, as a US-South
Korean military exercise is scheduled for March 9-20 and a US-South
Korea summit is in early April on the sidelines of the April 2 G-20
meeting, Yonhap said.
US envoy Stephen Bosworth makes an Asian tour this coming week to try
to revive stalled talks on the North's nuclear disarmament and agree on
a strategy to deter any missile launch, officials in Washington said
Thursday.
The North says it is determined to go ahead with what it calls a
peaceful satellite launch but has given no date. "We will launch a
satellite as planned," Kim Myong-Gil, a Pyongyang envoy to the United
Nations, told South Korean journalists in Atlanta on Thursday.
"Launching a satellite is part of a sovereign right which is
universal. We've been exercising our sovereign right and will continue
to do so. This cannot be negotiable," Kim was quoted as saying.
Seoul and Washington say Pyongyang is seeking a pretext to test a
Taepodong-2 missile which could theoretically reach Alaska, warning that
any North Korean rocket launch would violate a UN resolution.
The North test-launched a Taepodong-1 missile in 1998 and also fired
a longer-range Taepodong-2 in 2006. The 2006 test failed after 40
seconds but resulted sanctions under the UN resolution. The North tested
an atomic weapon in 2006.
Seoul, Sunday, AFP |