Fortunately.otherwise the State Dept would have given away the store.again.
 
Bruce
 
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/13/AR2006091300
580.html
 
North Korea Rebuffs U.S. Offer to Talk
By JAE-SOON CHANG
The Associated Press
Wednesday, September 13, 2006; 12:29 PM
SEOUL, South Korea -- South Korea's vice foreign minister said Wednesday he
understood the United States had offered one-on-one talks with North Korea
on the communist nation's nuclear program, but was rejected. However, a U.S.
official said in Washington that no new offer of direct talks had been made
to Pyongyang.
South Korea's Yonhap news agency and other media reported Tuesday that the
chief U.S. nuclear envoy, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill,
proposed a meeting with his North Korean counterpart during a recent stop in
China. The North did not accept the offer, the reports said.
"I understand that Assistant Secretary Hill made such a gesture on his own
initiative in an effort to resume" six-nation talks on the North's nuclear
program, South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan told a news
briefing.
A U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity
of the ongoing process, reiterated, however, that the United States would
only see the North as part of meetings with other countries, such as the
nuclear negotiations.
In South Korea, a Foreign Ministry official said Hill sent a "message" to
the North saying he could meet North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye
Gwan during a trip to China last week. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity, citing ministry policy, and did not offer any more details.
Efforts to restart the disarmament talks have gained greater urgency in
recent weeks as leaders worry about a potential North Korean nuclear weapons
test and considering the North's decision to test launch seven missiles in
July.
Nuclear talks _ among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United
States _ were last held in November, when negotiators failed to make
progress on implementing a September agreement in which the North pledged to
give up its nuclear programs in exchange for aid and security guarantees.
North Korea has refused to attend the six-party talks since last year in
anger at U.S. efforts to choke off the North's access to international
banking over its alleged currency counterfeiting and other wrongdoing.
Hill and Kim met in July 2005 in Beijing to negotiate the North's return to
the nuclear talks, ending a previous boycott.
In April, Hill refused to meet privately with Kim in Tokyo, where all chief
delegates to the six-nation talks had gathered for a private security
conference, citing the North's refusal to return to the table.
The two countries also have maintained communications through the North's
mission to the United Nations in New York. Washington says the channel is
only for communication purposes, not negotiation.


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