http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/world/1726728

Standing in neat rows on a snow-covered plaza, tens of thousands of North
Koreans rallied today in Pyongyang calling for a stronger military. The
communist state said U.S. economic sanctions against it would lead to war.
North Korea's saber-rattling came hours before the United States, Japan and
South Korea agreed to urge Pyongyang to renounce its nuclear weapons
programs if it wanted better ties with the rest of the world.

The three allies have stressed a peaceful resolution of the rising
tensions -- a stance President Bush reiterated today.

"In this case, I believe, working with countres in the region, diplomacy
will work," Bush said, speaking in Chicago on economic policy. "We have no
aggressive intentions, no argument with the North Korean people. We're
interested in peace in the Korean Peninsula."

But North Korea's rhetoric, broadcast to the world through its official
Korean Central News Agency, remained defiant.

"Sanctions mean a war, and the war knows no mercy," the KCNA, monitored in
Seoul, declared today.

In the North Korean capital, more than 100,000 people in dark overcoats and
caps attended a state-orchestrated rally and vowed to "exert utmost efforts
to increase the national defense capacity," the KCNA said.

Braving icy cold, the demonstrators shook clenched fists against the
backdrop of white-and-red communist slogans, according to KCNA photographs
carried by South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

In Washington, the U.S. State Department announced that the United States is
willing to talk to North Korea but will not make concessions to freeze
Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.

Winding up two days of talks with South Korea and Japan, a statement
approved by all three governments endorsed dialogue with North Korea as a
useful vehicle for resolving serious issues.

To follow up on the trilateral talks that began Monday, South Korea's
national security adviser, Yim Sung-joon, left for Washington on Tuesday to
meet his U.S. counterpart, Condoleezza Rice. From Washington, Yim will
travel to Tokyo for more talks.

Later this week, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly will travel
to Seoul.

On Monday, the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency gave North Korea a
second chance to abandon its suspected weapons programs -- stopping short of
referring the matter to the U.N. Security Council and effectively delaying
the possibility of U.N. sanctions.

President Bush reaffirmed that the United States has "no intention of
invading North Korea," but urged North Korea to permit international
monitoring of its nuclear facilities.

Welcoming the IAEA decision, South Korea's Foreign Ministry on Tuesday urged
North Korea not to miss a "precious chance" to resolve the issue
"diplomatically and peacefully."

North Korea's threat of a possible war was contained in a KCNA dispatch
lambasting what it described as "piracy" in the seizure of a North Korean
ship carrying missiles to Yemen last month.

U.S. and Spanish warships seized a North Korean ship carrying Scud missiles
in the Arabian Sea. They later allowed it to sail after receiving assurances
the Scuds would not be transferred elsewhere in the tense Persian Gulf
region.

Exporting missiles is a main source of hard currency for North Korea.

The North called the seizure part of a U.S. strategy of "total economic
sanctions aimed at isolating and stifling" North Korea.

Separately, South Korea said Tuesday that its last portion of the 400,000
tons of aid rice it promised to North Korea last year would leave port Jan.
14.

Extending more aid would require additional talks.

The North alarmed the world in October by admitting to a U.S. envoy that it
had a secret uranium-based nuclear weapons program, in violation of a 1994
accord.

As punishment, the United States and its allies halted oil supplies promised
in the agreement. North Korea then announced it would reactivate its older
plutonium-based nuclear program, saying it needs to restart a reactor to
generate electricity.

The United States says the plutonium-based program could be used to build
nuclear weapons. Washington has also said North Korea may already have two
nuclear weapons and could build several more in short order.



xponent
 Korea Steps Over The Line Maru
rob
________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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