http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200303/kt2003030417272311970.htm

The warhead of a long-range missile test-fired by North Korea was found in
the U.S. state of Alaska, a report to the National Assembly revealed
yesterday.

``According to a U.S. document, the last piece of a missile warhead fired by
North Korea was found in Alaska,'' former Japanese foreign minister Taro
Nakayama was quoted as saying in the report. ``Washington, as well as Tokyo,
has so far underrated Pyongyang's missile capabilities.''

The report was the culmination of monthlong activities of the Assembly's
overseas delegation to five countries over the North Korean nuclear crisis.
The Assembly dispatched groups of lawmakers to the United States, Japan,
China, Russia and European Union last month to collect information and
opinions on the international issue.

The team sent to Japan, headed by Rep. Kim Hak-won of the United Liberal
Democrats, reported, ``Nakayama said Washington has come to put more
emphasis on trilateral cooperation between South Korea, Japan and the United
States since it recognized that the three countries are within the range of
North Korean missiles.''

According to the group dispatched to the U.S., American politicians had a
wide range of opinions over the resolution of the nuclear issue, from ``a
peaceful resolution'' to ``military response.''

Doves, such as Rep. Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat and
co-chairman of the Bipartisan Task Force on Nonproliferation, called for a
peaceful settlement of the current confrontation, by offering food, energy
and other humanitarian aid to the poverty-stricken country, while urging the
North to give up its nuclear ambitions.

Rep. Markey also said the North should return to the nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty and the U.S. should make a nonaggression pact with
the communist North.

Hardliners, however, warned that the North's possession of nuclear weapons
will instigate a nuclear race in the region, provoking Japan to also acquire
nuclear weapons. Rep. Mark Steven Kirk, an Illinois Republican, said the
U.S. might have to bomb the Yongbyon nuclear complex should the North try to
export its nuclear material to other countries.

Over the controversy concerning the withdrawal of U.S. forces stationed
here, most American legislators that the parliamentary delegation met said
U.S. troops should stay on the peninsula as long as the Korean people want,
the report said.


xponent
Made In Korea Maru
rob
Workings of man
Set to ply out historical life
Reregaining the flower of the fruit of his tree
All awakening
All restoring you
Workings of man
Crying out from the fire set aflame
By his blindness to see that the warmth of his being
Is promised for his seeing his reaching so clearly
Workings of man
Driven far from the path
Rereleased in inhibitions
So that all is left for you
all is left for you
all is left for you
all this left for you NOW...




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