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Chinese School - N.Korea says not afraid of war after nuclear impasse

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea says not afraid of war after nuclear impasse

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-23 22:12

International negotiators leave after making closing statements at the
six-party talks in Beijing December 22, 2006. From left are Chinese Vice
Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, Russian Ambassador to China Sergei Razov, US
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, Japanese chief envoy
Kenichiro Sasae, South Korean chief negotiator Chun Yung-woo and North
Korea's Kim Kye Gwan. [Reuters]

Seoul - North Korea's official media blamed the United States on Saturday
for an impasse in talks aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear weapons
programme and said it was not afraid of war.

Special coverage:
North Korea Nuclear Crisis

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Five days of talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the
United States ended on Friday with the envoys failing to reach any deal.

The UN imposed sanctions on North Korea after it conducted its first
nuclear test in October but North Korean officials had focused at the
talks on trying to get separate US financial curbs lifted, envoys said.

North Korean delegate Kim Kye-gwan said Pyongyang had rejected pressure
from the United States to end its nuclear programme and accept
inspections of its nuclear facilities.

"We decisively opposed this and told the US side to further study our
proposal," Kim was quoted as saying.

In a separate official report, North Korea said: "Sanctions and pressure
will never work on the DPRK (North Korea)."

"The revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK want peace but they are not
afraid of war. They will never allow anyone to infringe upon the
sovereignty and dignity of their country even a bit," the report on its
KCNA news agency said.

In September 2005, North Korea said in principle it would give up its
nuclear arsenal in exchange for aid and security guarantees.

North Korean accounts at Macau's Banco Delta Asia were frozen after the
US Treasury designated the bank as a "primary money-laundering concern",
also in September 2005. North Korea said the curbs showed Washington had
negotiated in bad faith.

Washington maintains the nuclear talks and the financial crackdown are
separate issues and should not be confused.

The crackdown, which froze US$24 million in funds, had wide implications
for North Korea because it has scared other international banks away from
doing business with Pyongyang.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun appeared to sympathise with the North
Koreans' position, asking this week why the US Treasury would act just
days before the nuclear deal was struck.

"If one wants to look at it in a bad light, one may say it was all
coordinated between the two (the US State and Treasury Departments)," Roh
said in a speech.

South Korea's envoy said he wanted to see the six-party talks continue
because they contributed to peace in the region, Yonhap news agency
reported on Saturday.

The mainstream South Korean daily JoongAng Ilbo cautioned Pyongyang
against dragging its heels.

"If North Korea holds its ground obstinately, it will only face more
serious isolation and pain," it said in an editorial.

China, which has hosted the talks since 2003, counselled more flexibility
in the negotiations and avoided placing blame on either Washington or
Pyongyang for this week's failure.

The overseas edition of the People's Daily said the contending sides
needed to continue talking and "make necessary compromises."

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