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By Kurt Achin
Seoul
19 October 2006
The United States and South Korea are discussing how to implement1 last week's U. N. Security Council resolution imposing2 sanctions on North Korea. The two countries' top diplomats3 warn of grave consequences, if North Korea does not halt its nuclear testing.
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![]() South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun (R) talks with Condoleezza Rice (L) during their meeting at presidential Blue House in Seoul, Oct. 19, 2006 |
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Speaking together to reporters here in Seoul, they expressed a shared belief that Pyongyang must return unconditionally4 to multinational5 talks aimed at ending its nuclear programs.
Rice and Ban made it clear, however, that they were still searching for ways to implement the sanctions that the U.N. imposed after last week's North Korean first-ever nuclear test.
The resolution, among other things, calls on members to prevent North Korea from proliferating6 nuclear weapons and technology. That could include searching North Korean cargo7 suspected of containing nuclear materials.
But Rice emphasized, as she did Wednesday during a visit to Tokyo, that the resolution did not call for a blockade of North Korea. She said the United States would not try to exacerbate8 an already tense situation.
"The idea that somehow we would want [Resolution] 1718 to be implemented9 in a way that escalates10 tensions on the Korean Peninsula, or on the high seas for that matter, simply could not be more wrong," she said. "What we want is effective implementation11."
She says scrutinizing12 North Korean cargo could be accomplished13 mainly in ports, with the help of intelligence and through technologies, such as radiation detectors14, rather than by interdictions on the high seas.
North Korea's neighbors have expressed concern that such interdictions could lead to clashes.
South Korea's Ban, who will soon take over as secretary-general of the United Nations, warned North Korea not to conduct further nuclear tests. He says, if the North does more testing, there will be more serious consequences.
Ban did say South Korea will re-evaluate two projects it has funded in the North, a tourist resort and a special economic zone, to see if their continued operation complies with the U.N. resolution.
The two diplomats, however, generally avoided providing specifics about what acts their two countries might take, individually or collectively.
Rice said the resolution had been passed relatively15 quickly following the North Korea test of October 9, and nations were still discussing how best to implement the resolution's provisions.
Rice is scheduled to travel to Beijing on Friday, and then to Russia.
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