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NUKEWARS
N.Korean officials arrive in Beijing: reports
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 30, 2010


N.Korea boasts about uranium enrichment amid high tensions
Seoul (AFP) Nov 30, 2010 - Nuclear-armed North Korea boasted Tuesday it has "many thousands of centrifuges" running at a new uranium enrichment plant, which has raised fears the regime wants to make more fuel for atom bombs. Pyongyang issued its first report on the facility, which it says is for peaceful purposes, a week after launching a deadly artillery attack against the South and while a massive US-South Korean naval exercise was in full swing. World powers fear that the volatile regime of Kim Jong-Il, which has twice tested atom bombs, is seeking to produce weapons-grade uranium on top of the plutonium it already possesses to use in a game of nuclear brinkmanship. In a newspaper editorial carried by the official news agency, Pyongyang highlighted its nuclear accomplishments but insisted that a light-water reactor it is building, and the fuel for it, are for peaceful purposes.

Earlier this month the regime showed off its new uranium enrichment facilities to a visiting US nuclear scientist, who called the plant with 2,000 centrifuges "ultra-modern" and "stunning". "These facilities appear to be designed primarily for civilian nuclear power, not to boost North Korea's military capability," wrote the scientist, Siegfried Hecker, but he also warned the facilities "could be readily converted to produce highly-enriched uranium bomb fuel." On Tuesday North Korea insisted that its light water reactor -- which Hecker described as being in the early stages of construction -- and the enrichment facility to provide fuel is intended only to meet power demand. Impoverished North Korea, aside from lacking enough food for its people, also suffers from chronic power shortages. Satellite photos at night show the country as a dark patch next to the well-lit South. "We are actively building a light water reactor and, in order to meet the demand, we are operating a modern uranium enrichment system with many thousands of centrifuges," the KCNA report said.

"Our nuclear energy development, which is for peaceful purposes and to solve the electricity demand, will be more active," it added, citing an editorial from the ruling communist party's newspaper the Rodong Sinmun. "Using nuclear energy for peaceful purposes is a right that cannot be denied developing countries. Every countries in the world should practise that right because it cannot be oligopolised by a few countries," it said. "The problem is that some Western powers are, while turning blind on their own nuclear activities, criticising other countries' activities." North Korea, under a pact reached in six-nation disarmament talks with South Korea China, Japan, Russia, and the United States, in 2008 shut down an ageing reactor that had produced plutonium for its weapons drive. But Pyongyang abandoned the six-party talks process in April 2009 and a month later staged its second atomic bomb test. In September last year it announced that it had reached the final stage of enriching uranium.

Two top North Korean officials arrived in Beijing on Tuesday amid sharp tensions on the Korean peninsula following the North's artillery attack on the South, South Korean and Japanese media said.

Kim Yong-Il, the head of the international department of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party, arrived in Beijing on a flight from Pyongyang, Japan's Kyodo news agency reported.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported separately that Choe Thae-Bok, chairman of North Korea's Supreme People's Assembly and considered a close confidant of leader Kim Jong-Il, also arrived for a visit.

China's Xinhua news agency had said that Choe would be visiting until December 4, but its state media had made no previous mention of a visit by Kim, who is a top official in charge of diplomatic matters.

China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the visits and there was no mention in state media of the arrivals.

Tensions in the region have skyrocketed since North Korea launched an artillery barrage on a South Korean border island last week, killing two marines and two civilians and setting homes ablaze.

China, as North Korea's major ally, has come under pressure to use its influence to rein in Pyongyang, but Beijing has so far refused to publicly take sides.

On Sunday, it called for "emergency consultations" in Beijing in December among the envoys to the six nations involved in stalled talks on dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons programme.

However, the United States, South Korea and Japan -- all parties to those talks -- have brushed aside the proposal. The six-nation negotiations also include Russia, North Korea and hosts China.

Japan's foreign ministry also said it was sending its top North Korea envoy to China on Tuesday, where he will meet his Chinese counterpart Wu Dawei.

Japan's embassy in Beijing declined comment when contacted by AFP.

earlier related report
US brushes aside China's call for N.Korea talks
Seoul (AFP) Nov 30, 2010 - The United States stressed sanctions over diplomacy to rein in North Korea, brushing aside China's call for talks as US and South Korean warships staged a show of strength Tuesday against Pyongyang.

The North's deadly artillery attack on a South Korean border island last week has highlighted deep differences between Beijing and Washington and its allies over how to restrain the North.

China's refusal publicly to condemn its ally for the shelling -- the first of a civilian area in the South since the 1950-53 war -- has sparked anger and public protests in South Korea.

The United States and Japan, meanwhile, have been dismissive about China's call for emergency consultations on the crisis between envoys to stalled six-nation talks on the North's nuclear disarmament.

The White House said such talks would amount to "PR activity" unless Pyongyang changes its behaviour.

"The North Koreans need to demonstrate a seriousness of purpose in ending their aggressive behaviour," spokesman Robert Gibbs said Monday.

Gibbs said the United States and other countries "were not interested in stabilising the region through a series of PR (public relations) activities".

US ambassador Susan Rice separately called for tighter enforcement of UN sanctions in response to the "outrageous" artillery attack. China should play a "responsible leadership role" in defusing the crisis, she said.

Japan's foreign minister also faulted China's proposal.

"It's unacceptable for us to hold six-party talks only because North Korea has gone amok," Seiji Maehara told the Wall Street Journal.

"We must first see some kind of sincere effort from North Korea, on its uranium enrichment programme and the latest incident."

The North's attack on Yeonpyeong island, which killed two civilians and two marines and injured 18 other people, came days after the disclosure that it has an apparently functioning uranium enrichment plant.

Analysts say the two events appear designed to bolster the military credentials of leader-in-waiting Kim Jong-Un, or to pressure the United States and South Korea into holding dialogue and possibly resuming aid.

The North says the plant will produce fuel for electricity generation but experts and senior US officials say it could easily be configured to make weapons-grade uranium.

The North's state media said Tuesday "many thousands of centrifuges" are operating at the plant, claiming it is for peaceful purposes. The country has already tested two bombs made from plutonium.

South Korea is strengthening artillery and troop numbers on its islands near the disputed Yellow Sea border in response to the attack.

President Lee Myung-Bak, in a toughly-worded speech Monday, did not mention China's talks proposal but said the North would not voluntarily mend its ways.

"If the North commits any additional provocations against the South, we will make sure that it pays a dear price without fail," he said, calling the shelling "a crime against humanity".

Far to the south of the border, 11 US and South Korean warships headed by the US carrier George Washington were staging a third day of exercises aimed at sending a message of deterrence to the North.

Tuesday's drills were practising defence against the intrusion of North Korean ships and against air attacks, the South's military said.

The western sea border has been an enduring flashpoint, with deadly naval clashes there in 1999, 2002 and last November. In March a South Korean warship sank there, after what Seoul says was a torpedo attack by Pyongyang.

The North says the "Northern Limit Line", drawn by United Nations forces after the war, should run further south.

"The NLL on which South Korean war addicts are insisting is an illegal and non-existent ghost line," said Rodong Sinmun, the ruling communist party newspaper.

"If South Koreans do not learn lessons from this (shelling) incident and insist the NLL is their borderline, then we will take strong reactive measures."

State media also blasted the current naval drills, calling them provocative and claiming they heighten the risk of war.

"We have full deterrence to destroy our enemies at once," said cabinet newspaper Minju Chosun. "If the US and South Korean enemies dare to fire one shell in our territory and sea territory, they will have to pay for it."

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NUKEWARS
US brushes aside China's call for N.Korea talks
Seoul (AFP) Nov 30, 2010
The United States stressed sanctions over diplomacy to rein in North Korea, brushing aside China's call for talks as US and South Korean warships staged a show of strength Tuesday against Pyongyang. The North's deadly artillery attack on a South Korean border island last week has highlighted deep differences between Beijing and Washington and its allies over how to restrain the North. Ch ... read more


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