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New Effort Under Way to Revive North Korea Nuclear Talks
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&ctl=142AC7B:5F753BCA39991A3B65443F39CF53CBEB9574F7DCC14957C0 Chinese senior
delegate says Beijing backs new US-South Korean approach toward North
Korea New diplomatic efforts are under way to bring North Korea back
to nuclear disarmament talks. A top Chinese diplomat is in Seoul for
discussions, a day after the South Korean president made clear his
government and the United States are trying a new approach in
resolving the nuclear dispute.





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South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon, right, greets Wu Dawei,
left, China's top envoy to the six-party talks, Sept. 29, 2006China's
senior delegate to the nuclear disarmament talks said Friday in Seoul
that his government backs the new U.S.-South Korean approach toward
North Korea.

Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei gave no other details about his
country's position. Wu arrived in Seoul Friday to consult with South
Korean officials on how to end North Korea's year-long boycott of the
negotiations.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun says his country and the United
States have agreed to what he calls a "broad and common approach"
toward North Korea.

The two countries have been working for three years with China,
Russia, and Japan to persuade the North to end its nuclear arms
programs.

Mr. Roh on Thursday told the South Korean MBC network that it is too
early to make details of the new approach public.

The South Korean president says Pyongyang was briefed about the plan
before he met with President Bush earlier this month. He says the
North has neither embraced nor rejected the new plan.

A U.S. embassy official in Seoul says the new approach involves
tighter coordination between the two allies. In addition, the United
States will support Seoul's plan to invest at least $3 billion in
North Korea's infrastructure if Pyongyang returns to the six-nation
talks.

Washington also made clear this week that it would meet separately
with North Korea if it agrees to resume the nuclear talks. Pyongyang
has long demanded bilateral talks, which until now, the U.S. had said
could only be held in the context of the six-nation nuclear talks.



Pyongyang is boycotting the nuclear talks to protest financial
sanctions the United States imposed because of alleged North Korean
money laundering and counterfeiting.

Washington has said they are a law enforcement matter and are separate
from the nuclear talks.

South Korea and the United States have often diverged in their
approaches to North Korea. Seoul strives to engage and cooperate with
its impoverished neighbor, while Washington has preferred diplomatic
and financial pressure.

Tong Kim was a long-time senior interpreter for the U.S. State
Department in negotiations with the North, and is now an international
relations professor at Seoul's Korea University. He says the "common
approach" involves some face-saving way around the sanctions issue.

"It could be something like slowing down of additional sanctions. But
I don't think the (U.S.) Treasury is interested in doing anything like
that at all - and I don't think Treasury gets much pressure from the
White House," he said.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to be in Asia within
the next two months for what she describes as a "final push" to get
the six-party talks restarted. This week, she described the current
situation as "unacceptable."