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    Default North Korea threatens war against U.S.

    North Korea threatens war against U.S.
    AP via Yahoo! ^ | October 11, 2006 | HANS GREIMEL




    North Korea warned on Wednesday that increased U.S. pressure over the regime's reported nuclear test could be considered an act of war, and South Korea suggested it would build up its conventional arsenal to deal with its belligerent neighbor.


    North Korea's No. 2 leader threatened to conduct more nuclear tests if the United States continued what he called its "hostile attitude."
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the United States would not attack North Korea, rejecting a suggestion that Pyongyang may feel it needs nuclear weapons to stave off an Iraq-style U.S. invasion.
    In its first formal statement since the test, North Korea said it could respond to U.S. pressure with "physical" measures.


    "If the U.S. keeps pestering us and increases pressure, we will regard it as a declaration of war and will take a series of physical corresponding measures," the North's Foreign Ministry said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency. The statement didn't specify what those measures could be.


    Japan planned to impose a total ban on North Korean imports and prohibit its ships from entering Japanese ports, a news report said. The sanctions will also expand restrictions on North Korean nationals entering Japan, the country's public broadcaster NHK said.


    The sanctions, which also expand restrictions on North Korean nationals entering Japan, are to be announced following an emergency security meeting headed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe later Wednesday, according to NHK.


    Cabinet spokesman Hiroshi Suzuki confirmed a security meeting was scheduled, but refused to discuss its agenda. He said sanctions, if approved, could take effect immediately.


    Along the razor-wired no-man's-land separating the divided Koreas, communist troops on the North's side were more boldly trying to provoke their Southern counterparts: spitting across the demarcation line, making throat-slashing hand gestures, flashing their middle finger and trying to talk to the troops, said U.S. Army Maj. Jose DeVarona of Fayetteville, N.C., adding that the overall situation was calm.


    It appeared to be business as usual on the streets of North Korea's capital. Video by AP Television News showed people milling about Kim II Sung square and rehearsing a performance for the 80th anniversary of the "Down with Imperialism Union."


    Kim Yong Nam, second to North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, told Japan's Kyodo News agency that further nuclear testing would hinge on U.S. policy toward the communist government.


    "The issue of future nuclear tests is linked to U.S. policy toward our country," Kim was quoted as saying when asked whether Pyongyang will conduct more nuclear tests.


    "If the United States continues to take a hostile attitude and apply pressure on us in various forms, we will have no choice but to take physical steps to deal with that," Kyodo quoted him as saying.


    South Korea's defense minister said that Seoul could enlarge its conventional arsenal to deal with a potentially nuclear-armed North Korea.
    "If North Korea really has the (nuclear) capabilities, we will improve and enlarge the number of conventional weapons as long as it doesn't violate the principle of denuclearization," Defense Minister Yoon Kwang-ung told parliament.


    "We will supplement (our ability) to conduct precision strikes against storage facilities and intercept delivery means, while also improving the system of having military units and individuals defend themselves," he said.
    Scientists and other governments have said Monday's underground test has yet to be confirmed, with some experts saying the blast was significantly smaller than even the first nuclear bombs dropped on Japan during World War II.


    North Korea appeared to respond to that Wednesday, saying in its statement that it "successfully conducted an underground nuclear test under secure conditions."


    In rare direct criticism of the communist regime from Seoul, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said that the security threat cited by North Korea is exaggerated or nonexistent.


    "North Korea says the reason it is pursuing nuclear (weapons) is for its security, but the security threat North Korea speaks of either does not exist in reality, or is very exaggerated," Roh said, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.


    He spoke even as South Korea's military was checking its readiness for nuclear attack, Yonhap said. The Joint Chiefs of Staff told Defense Minister Yoon Kwang-ung that the military needed an improved ability to respond to such an attack, including state-of-the-art weapons capable of destroying a nuclear missile, the report said.


    Rice said President Bush has told the North Koreans that "there is no intention to invade or attack them. So they have that guarantee. ... I don't know what more they want."


    Rice told CNN Tuesday that Bush "never takes any of his options off the table. But is the United States, somehow, in a provocative way, trying to invade North Korea? It's just not the case."


    The top U.S. general in South Korea said that American forces are fully capable of deterring an attack from the North despite the communist nation's claim of a nuclear test.


    "Be assured that the alliance has the forces necessary to deter aggression, and should deterrence fail, decisively defeat any North Korean attack against" South Korea, U.S. Army Gen. B.B. Bell said in a statement to troops. "U.S. forces have been well trained to confront nuclear, biological and chemical threats."


    About 29,500 U.S. troops are deployed in the South, a remnant of the 1950-53 Korean War that ended in a cease-fire that has never been replaced by a peace treaty.


    Bell said the seismic waves detected after the claimed test were still being analyzed and that it had not been yet determined if they indicated a successful nuclear test.


    A media report that North Korea may have conducted a second nuclear test rattled nerves Wednesday, but the Japanese government said there was no indication that a test had taken place.


    NHK reported around 8:30 a.m. that unidentified government sources were saying that "tremors" had been detected in North Korea.


    South Korean and U.S. seismic monitoring stations said that they hadn't detected any activity indicating a second test, and White House spokesman Blair Jones said the United States had detected no evidence of additional North Korean testing.


    At the United Nations, China agreed to punishment of North Korea but not severe sanctions backed by the U.S., which it said would be too crushing for its impoverished communist ally.


    Beijing is seen as having the greatest outside leverage on North Korea as a traditional ally and top provider of badly needed economic and energy aid.
    The United States asked the U.N. Security Council to impose a partial trade embargo including strict limits on Korea's weapons exports and freezing of related financial assets.


    All imports would be inspected too, to filter materials that could be made into nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.


    Pyongyang has demanded one-on-one talks with Washington and has threatened to launch a nuclear-tipped missile if the U.S. doesn't comply.
    Washington insists on the so-called six-party format, where Russia, China, South Korea and Japan have joined the United States in talking to North Korea.
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    Default Re: North Korea threatens war against U.S.

    N.Korea threatens Japan over sanctions
    Yahoo News (AP) ^ | October 12, 2006 | Staff



    A North Korean official threatened "strong countermeasures" against Japan for new sanctions against the communist regime, Kyodo News agency reported from Pyongyang on Thursday.


    The Japanese government decided on a package of additional economic sanctions against North Korea on Wednesday in response to the regime's claim of a nuclear test, including a ban on all imports from the country and the docking of North Korean ships in Japanese ports.


    The sanctions are expected to go into effect after they are approved by Japan's Cabinet Friday.


    "We will take strong countermeasures," Kyodo quoted Song Il Ho, North Korea's ambassador in charge of diplomatic normalization talks with Japan, as saying in an interview on Wednesday when asked about fresh sanctions by Japan.


    "The specific contents will become clear if you keep watching. We never speak empty words," he added.

    (Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
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    Default Re: North Korea threatens war against U.S.

    Japan slaps Pyongyang with trade sanctions
    The Washington Times ^ | October 12, 2006 | Andrew Salmon



    Japan halted trade with North Korea yesterday, while the United States and other nations sought additional penalties against the communist state for reportedly conducting a nuclear test.


    President Bush demanded tough sanctions against North Korea, but he vowed to find a diplomatic solution to Pyongyang's defiance and said there were no plans for a military attack.


    North Korea threatened unspecified "physical measures" against the United States and its allies, while South Korea said it was reviewing its defenses against a nuclear attack.


    Japan's sanctions were the most substantive steps against the North since Monday's reported nuclear test at an underground site north of Pyongyang.
    It banned all imports from North Korea and prohibited North Korean ships from entering Japanese ports.


    "We cannot tolerate North Korea's actions if we are to protect Japanese lives and property," Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said after an emergency security meeting. "These measures were taken to protect the peace."


    Meanwhile at the United Nations, the United States is expected to push for a vote on North Korea by the end of the week despite opposition from China to some of the sanctions aimed at punishing Pyongyang for its reported nuclear test.


    (Excerpt) Read more at washtimes.com ...
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    Default Re: North Korea threatens war against U.S.

    Divisions over N Korea sanctions - ...Surprise? ....Russia and China...
    BBC ^ | Thursday, 12 October 2006, 18:09 GMT 19:09 UK | BBC Staff




    Divisions over N Korea sanctions



    Mr Bolton said a swift response to North Korea was needed


    The UN Security Council has ended talks on a new draft of a US resolution pushing for sanctions against North Korea over its claimed nuclear test.

    The US wants a vote on the draft by Friday but diplomatic sources told the BBC China and Russia opposed this.



    The draft targets the North's missile and nuclear programmes under the UN's Chapter Seven - which makes sanctions mandatory and may allow using force.


    China and Russia are reportedly worried about how sanctions may be enforced.
    They have asked for more time to consider the US proposals.
    Western diplomats believe China's support for the draft resolution is essential if tough action is to be taken against North Korea, says the BBC's UN correspondent, Laura Trevelyan.


    Japanese sanctions
    North Korea's underground test reportedly took place at 1036 (0136 GMT) on Monday in Gilju in north-east Hamgyong province.


    Russia is the only country to have confirmed that it was a nuclear explosion, amid speculation the test was not wholly successful.



    US SANCTIONS PROPOSAL

    Halting trade in material that could be used to make weapons of mass destruction


    Inspections of cargo going in and out of North Korea

    The ending of financial transactions used to support nuclear proliferation

    A ban on the import of luxury goods









    Who stands where



    In pictures: Joy and anger






    North Korea has said it will take "strong countermeasures" against Japan if it goes ahead with new sanctions against the country, a senior North Korean diplomat was quoted as saying on Thursday.


    "The specific contents will become clear if you keep watching. We never speak empty words," Song Il-Ho, the North's ambassador in charge of normalising relations with Tokyo, told Japan's Kyodo news agency.


    North Korea's threats are part of a campaign to make the world think twice about its response to the nuclear test, says the BBC's Charles Scanlon in the South Korean capital, Seoul.


    On Wednesday, Japan imposed its own tough new sanctions on North Korea, including banning all imports from the country. The sanctions are expected to be approved by the Japanese cabinet on Friday.


    On Thursday, South Korea said it had not detected any abnormal radioactivity levels in its country after the alleged North Korea nuclear test.


    'Swift response'

    There is agreement in the UN Security Council that North Korea should face punitive measures, but countries are divided over how tough these should be.


    The US wants the sanctions - which would also target luxury goods - to be brought under Chapter Seven of the UN Charter. This means they would be mandatory and ultimately enforceable by military means.



    N KOREA NUCLEAR PROGRAMME



    Believed to have 'handful' of nuclear weapons


    But not thought to have any small enough to put in a missile

    Could try dropping from plane, though world watching closely









    Q&A: Nuclear crisis



    Underground nuclear testing






    But China, Russia and South Korea have expressed varying degrees of opposition to such a resolution.


    China is also reported to be unhappy about authorising inspections of cargo vessels moving in and out of North Korea in order to find weapons-related material.



    Both China and South Korea are worried that such inspections could provoke military action from North Korea - a risk neither country is willing to take, our correspondent adds.


    The new draft retains the call for cargo inspections but is reported to soften language in some key areas of the document.


    It also includes a clause allowing nations to ban the entry or transit of people believed to support Pyongyang's weapons programme, reports say.


    Mr Bolton said he hoped for a vote on Friday.


    "There are still a lot of comments that have been made, and areas of disagreement, but as we've said repeatedly, we think this requires a strong and swift response," he said.


    Threat of new tests
    On Wednesday US President George W Bush said North Korea would face "serious repercussions" over its nuclear test claim.
    He told reporters that Washington remained committed to diplomacy, but stressed that the US reserved "all options to defend our friends in the region".





    HAVE YOUR SAY

    If the US, UK and other governments wish to stop other countries having nuclear weapons then they should lead by example




    Alastair Mooney, Leicester, UK









    Send us your comments






    But North Korea appeared unwilling to make any concessions. The country's number two leader, Kim Yong-nam, has threatened more tests if the US remained "hostile".


    And a statement from a foreign ministry spokesman said that North Korea was ready "for both dialogue and confrontation".


    "If the US increases pressure upon the DPRK, persistently doing harm to it, it will continue to take physical countermeasures, considering it as a declaration of a war," the statement carried by state news agency KCNA said.


    Our correspondent says diplomats want to act swiftly in response to North Korea's nuclear test.


    They know that Iran is watching closely from the sidelines to see how North Korea is dealt with.


    Next week, the Security Council is due to consider what action to take against Tehran following its failure to stop enriching uranium, our correspondent adds.
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