U.S. says N. Korea demand for nuclear status unacceptable

U.S. says N. Korea demand for nuclear status unacceptable

PanARMENIAN.Net - North Korea insisted on Tuesday, April 23 that it be recognized as a nuclear weapons state, a demand the United States promptly dismissed as "neither realistic nor acceptable", Reuters reported.

After weeks of tension on the Korean peninsula, including North Korean threats of nuclear war, the North has in recent days begun to at least talk about dialogue in response to calls for talks from both the United States and South Korea.

The North's Rodong Sinmun newspaper rejected as unacceptable the U.S. and South Korean condition that it agree to dismantle its nuclear weapons and suspend missile launches before talks can begin.

"If the DPRK sits at a table with the U.S., it has to be a dialogue between nuclear weapons states, not one side forcing the other to dismantle nuclear weapons," the newspaper said, referring to the North by its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

The United States swiftly rejected Pyongyang's claim of nuclear status, while NATO foreign ministers condemned its pursuit of ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs and called for "credible" talks to be held on denuclearization.

"North Korea's demand to be recognized as a nuclear weapons state is neither realistic nor acceptable," Thomas Countryman, U.S. Assistant Secretary for International Security and Non-Proliferation, told Reuters in Geneva.

Countryman, who is heading the U.S. delegation to two-week talks on the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), told reporters: "It is important that the world respond calmly but deliberately without changing our emphasis that the goal of the world to which North Korea is committed is a denuclearized Korean peninsula.

"And the more states that make that clear, the greater the chance we have of arriving at exactly that goal," he said.

A White House spokesman said this month North Korea would need to show it was serious about abandoning its nuclear ambitions for talks to be meaningful.

In Brussels, NATO foreign ministers issued a statement saying that North Korea's "provocative actions" violated UN Security Council resolutions, undermined regional stability and jeopardized prospects for lasting peace.

"We urge the DPRK to refrain from further provocative acts," the NATO ministers said, calling for North Korea to comply with Security Council resolutions and return to the NPT from which the reclusive country announced its withdrawal in 2003.

Pyongyang should abandon all nuclear weapons and nuclear and ballistic missile programs in a "complete, verifiable and irreversible manner" and engage in credible talks on denuclearization, they said.

North Korea signed a denuclearization-for-aid deal in 2005 but later backed out of that pact. It now says its nuclear arms are a "treasured sword" that it will never give up.

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