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S. Korea urges North to talk before military drills restart
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 26, 2018


Mattis wants to keep pressure on N. Korea
Honolulu (AFP) Jan 27, 2018 - The United States and South Korea are going to keep tightening the screws on Pyongyang so that the hermit state gives up its nuclear program, Pentagon chief Jim Mattis said Friday.

"As two peace-loving nations, the Republic of Korea and America welcome the Olympic Games talks between the ROK and DPRK while at the same time remaining steadfast with the international economic pressure campaign to denuclearize the Korean peninsula," Mattis said in Honolulu.

The defense secretary was speaking at the start of a meeting with his South Korean counterpart Song Young-Moo at US Pacific Command, or PACOM, headquarters.

"Diplomacy should repose reason on Kim's reckless rhetoric and dangerous provocations," Mattis said, warning that the Winter Olympics talks and the respite in inter-Korean ties that accompany them do not solve overarching problems.

"The Kim regime is a threat to the entire world... Our response to this threat remains diplomacy-led, backed up with military options available to ensure that our diplomats are understood to be speaking from a position of strength."

Pyongyang has agreed to send athletes and support delegations to the South for the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang next month and form a unified women's ice hockey team with the South.

The move followed months of entreaties from Seoul to take part in a "peace Olympics," prompting a rare and rapid improvement in the atmosphere on the peninsula.

But the North is also preparing a massive military parade in Pyongyang on February 8, a day before the Winter Olympics' opening ceremony.

The North has long said it is open to talks without preconditions, but the US says it must first take concrete steps towards denuclearization, although the administration of President Donald Trump has at times sent mixed and conflicting messages on the issue.

The Winter Olympics will offer only a brief respite from tensions over North Korea's nuclear ambitions, the South's unification minister warned Friday, urging Pyongyang to seize the opportunity to talk to Washington.

Seoul and the US have only agreed to put off major joint military exercises until after the end of the Paralympics on March 25, pointed out Cho Myoung-Gyon, who is in charge of the South's relations with its neighbour.

The Foal Eagle and Key Resolve drills always infuriate Pyongyang, which condemns them as rehearsals for invasion and often responds with its own provocations.

"When the military exercises start, North Korea is likely to react angrily and will probably launch provocative acts, prompting a new layer of sanctions," Cho said.

A return to the "vicious cycle" of the last two years, with North Korean missile launches or atomic blasts leading to new international sanctions, followed by new tests, was a "realistic guess", he told a forum in Seoul.

Pyongyang has agreed to send athletes and support delegations to the South for the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang next month and form a unified women's ice hockey team with the South, after months of entreaties from Seoul to take part in a "peace Olympics", prompting a rare and rapid improvement in the atmosphere on the peninsula.

But the North was also preparing a massive military parade in Pyongyang on February 8, a day before the Winter Olympics' opening ceremony, Cho said.

"This is going to be a considerably threatening show of force, involving a large number of troops and many weapons."

Instead Seoul has urged Pyongyang to open a dialogue with Washington, he said.

The North has long said it is open to talks without preconditions, but the US says it must first take concrete steps towards denuclearisation, although the administration of President Donald Trump has at times sent mixed and conflicting messages on the issue.

"We need to make the momentum lead into April and extend after June," the minister added.

NUKEWARS
US sanctions N. Korean, Chinese firms aiding Pyongyang
Washington (AFP) Jan 24, 2018
The United States slapped new sanctions on North Korean and Chinese firms and individuals that it said support the Pyongyang regime of Kim Jong-Un and his nuclear weapons program. The move comes as the US seeks to choke the flow of goods and materials crucial to North Korea's economy like oil, electronics and metals, and pressure Kim to halt the development of nuclear weapons that threaten t ... read more

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