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  Japan presses for U.N. stand on N.Korea nuclear vow
Last updated: 2006-10-05


Japan presses for U.N. stand on N.Korea nuclear vow
2006-10-05

Category
Japan Diplomacy
People
Shinzo Abe
Kim Jong Il
Event
Korea Nuclear Crisis
Japan-North Korea
Japan pressed on with efforts on Thursday to secure a U.N. condemnation of North Korea's nuclear test threat after Washington, in its starkest warning so far, said it would not live with a nuclear-armed Pyongyang.

North Korea's neighbors, including China -- the closest the reclusive Stalinist state has to an ally -- hardened their response to Tuesday's announcement, in contrast to their disunity over missile tests carried out by Pyongyang three months ago.

Japan's Kyodo news agency reported from New York that Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing had warned North Korea it would face "serious consequences" if it made good on its pledge to test a nuclear device.

Quoting diplomatic sources, it said Li had conveyed the warning from China's top leadership to North Korea's ambassador in Beijing. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said she could not confirm the report.

Publicly, the foreign ministry has called only for restraint on North Korea's part and for other countries to avoid actions that would heighten tensions.

The reported hardening of Beijing's tone came as Japan -- perhaps ceding ground to China -- signaled a willingness to accept a less formal U.N. Security Council warning than the "presidential statement" it has sought along with the United States and France.

The proposed statement would warn North Korea that if it went ahead with a test, the council would impose consequences, although it does not specify what those should be.

China, however, wants the issue resolved through six-country talks set up to end North Korea's nuclear weapons program.

Japan's chief cabinet secretary, Yasuhisa Shiozaki, told a news conference on Thursday that Tokyo was now ready to accept a "press statement" from the United Nations for the sake of a speedy and united condemnation.

"A president's press statement would quickly send a united message from international society," he said. "Debate will resume (at the United Nations) tonight, and we hope that they'll discuss (it) thoroughly and come to a decision."

"THE WORLD AGAINST KIM"

Japan's new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, is due to visit Beijing on Sunday and Seoul the following day to break the ice in relations between Tokyo and its neighbors left by his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi.

"Seeing the new diplomatic overtures between China, South Korea and Japan is probably ratcheting up North Korean concerns," said Brad Glosserman, executive director at the Hawaii-based Pacific Forum CSIS.

"The ability of these countries to coordinate has got to be distressing ... If I were Kim Jong-il I'd feel like the whole world was against me," he added, referring to North Korea's leader.

Analysts say North Korea has in the past sought to exploit tensions among its partners in the six-party talks, South Korea China, Japan, Russia and the United States.

Pyongyang has boycotted those talks for almost a year due to a U.S. crackdown on North Korean offshore bank accounts that Washington says is aimed at ending suspected illicit activities and has nothing to do with the six-party process.

Analysts and officials said Pyongyang's nuclear test announcement on Tuesday could be an attempt to push the United States into direct talks on ending the crackdown.

But U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Chris Hill on Wednesday warned Pyongyang, which has said it has nuclear bombs, "it can have a future or it can have these weapons, it cannot have both."

"We are not going to live with a nuclear North Korea, we are not going to accept it," Hill told the U.S.-Korea Institute, which is part of the Johns Hopkins University.

Hill refused to say what steps Washington might take to ensure that North Korea did not succeed in testing a weapon.

"We would have no choice but to act resolutely to make sure that the DPRK (North Korea) understood -- and to make sure that any other country understands -- that this (nuclear test) is a very bad mistake," Hill said.

(Additional reporting by Elaine Lies in Tokyo, Carol Giacomo, Paul Eckert and Will Dunham in Washington, Ben Blanchard in Beijing and Evelyn Leopold at the United Nations) Muzi.com News

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