North Korea reportedly rejected the idea of resuming talks to abandon
its nuclear program on Saturday, but said it would welcome negotiations
for a peace treaty with Washington.
North Korea’s foreign ministry made the statement one day after
President Obama and South Korean President Park Geun-hye said they were
ready to open talks with Pyongyang on sanctions if they were serious
about dissolving its nuclear program, according to Reuters.
“If the United States insists on taking a different path, the Korean
peninsula will only see our unlimited nuclear deterrent being
strengthened further,” the North said in a statement.
North and South Korea are still technically at war after signing a
truce in 1953 to temporarily end their conflict. The U.S. also signed
the deal after backing the South.
Obama, while meeting with Park on Friday, said Iran had been prepared
to have a “serious conversation” about the possibility of giving up the
pursuit of nuclear weapons. He said there’s no indication of that in
North Korea’s case.
"At the point where Pyongyang says, `We're interested in seeing
relief from sanctions and improved relations, and we are prepared to
have a serious conversation about denuclearization,' it's fair to say
we'll be right there at the table," Obama told a joint news conference.
In a joint statement after Friday’s meeting, the U.S. and South Korea
said that if North Korea decides to launch another rocket into space or
test a nuclear explosion, “it will face consequences, including seeking
further significant measures by the U.N. Security Council.” The
statement also said they would never accept North Korea as a nuclear
weapons state.
North Korea had walked away from talks involving the U.S. and four
other countries in 2008 and continued to conduct nuclear tests. It
claims the only way to end conflict with Washington is to sign a peace
treaty.
Park’s visit Friday further strengthened South Korea’s ties with the U.S.
U.S. retains 28,500 troops in South Korea, a legacy of the 1950-53
Korean War, and nearly 50,000 troops in Japan. Obama called the
U.S.-South Korean alliance "unbreakable." Park called it a "lynchpin" of
regional security.
In August, the two Koreas threatened each other with war after two
South Korean soldiers were wounded by land mines Seoul says were planted
by the North. The tensions have since eased, and the two sides have
agreed to resume next week reunions of Korean families divided by the
Korean War.
The Obama administration has faced criticism from hawks and doves
alike for a lack of high-level attention on North Korea, which estimated
to have enough fissile material for between 10 and 16 nuclear weapons.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/10/18/north-korea-reportedly-seeks-to-end-conflict-with-us-with-peace-treaty/
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