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N.Korea calls for better relations with South

US Korea envoys head to east Asia
Washington (AFP) Jan 2, 2011 - The US point men for North Korea policy will head to the region this week for talks with top officials in South Korea, China and Japan, the State Department said Sunday. Special Representative for North Korea Policy Ambassador Stephen Bosworth and Sung Kim, the ambassador to suspended six-party talks on the North's nuclear program, plan to be in Seoul on Tuesday and Beijing on Wednesday. Bosworth will continue on to Tokyo on January 6, and "in all three cities, he will meet with senior government officials to discuss next steps on the Korean Peninsula," the State Department said in a statement.

Tensions have run high since the North shelled a South Korean border island in November, killing two soldiers and two civilians in one of the most serious border incidents since the 1950-1953 war. Six-party talks bringing together the United States, China, North Korea, South Korea, Japan and Russia ground to a halt in April 2009 when Pyongyang walked out and ordered UN nuclear inspectors to leave the country. It staged a second nuclear test a month later. However, North Korea began the new year with calls for improved relations with the South, and did not follow through on threats to respond to a live-fire drill on the same border island in December.

N.Korea leader watches tank division drill: state media
Seoul (AFP) Dec 31, 2010 - North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il watched a tank division drill, state media said Friday, as tensions remain high over the North's artillery attack on South Korea in November. Kim expressed "great satisfaction" after observing the drill by the Seoul Ryu Kyong Su 105 Guards Tank Division, the official Korean Central News Agency said.

He called for "fully preparing all its soldiers as a match for a hundred fighters possessed of high military qualifications and combat ability", it said, without saying when and where the drill took place. Cross-border tensions are high after the North shelled a South Korean island near the Yellow Sea border on November 23, killing four people including civilians. The South has since staged a series of military exercises, including a live-fire drill on December 20 on the island, but the North did not follow through with threats of a new and deadlier attack. On Friday the North's ruling communist party newspaper accused Seoul of aggravating a tense situation with military drills.

"Such action brought halt to the dialogue and cooperation between the north and the south which had been barely maintained. And it drove the situation of the Korean Peninsula to the brink of war again," Rodong Sinmun said in a commentary. But South Korean Defence Minister Kim Kwan-Jin issued a strongly worded New Year message, ordering the military to maintain combat preparedness against any fresh attacks. "If the enemy provokes again, we shall use all possible combat capabilities to win until the enemy surrenders," he said.

A retired army general was named Friday to head the South's new presidential team to oversee the handling of national emergencies such as a sudden attack by North Korea. Ahn Kwang-Chan, a military policy specialist, became a presidential secretary and head of the office for national crisis management, the president's office said. Ahn, 54, previously served as head of the defence ministry's policy bureau. The new office will focus on predicting and managing a security crisis.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 1, 2011
North Korea began 2011 with calls for improved relations with South Korea after a year of tensions marked by the first deadly attack on a civilian area since the war.

"Confrontation between North and South should be defused as early as possible," a joint New Year editorial of three leading North Korean state newspapers said on Saturday.

"Dialogue and cooperation should be promoted proactively," it said.

Relations plunged after the North shelled a border island in November, killing four people, including two civilians.

World leaders leapt to condemn the attack, with many calling on China to rein in its unpredictable ally, something Beijing so far appears unwilling to do.

The South has since staged a series of military exercises, including a live-fire drill on December 20 on the island but the North did not follow through with threats of a new and deadlier attack.

The editorial, which North Koreans are obliged to read, said: "This year we should launch a more determined campaign to improve inter-Korean relations.

"Active efforts should be made to create an atmosphere of dialogue and cooperation between North and South by placing the common interests of the nation above anything else."

Professor Yang Moo-Jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said Pyongyang was apparently pursuing stability on the Korean peninsula to cement an eventual hereditary succession by heir apparent Kim Jong-Un.

The youngest son of leader Kim Jong-Il burst into the limelight in September. He was appointed a four-star general, given senior ruling party posts and appeared in photos and at a mass parade close to his father, whose health is widely thought to be failing.

The editorial, which was carried by the North's official news agency, also reiterated that Pyongyang, whose nuclear drive is the subject of currently stalled six-party talks, is committed to denuclearisation.

But in a reference to South Korean military drills that have sometimes included the United States, the newspapers warned: "It is imperative to check the North-targeted war exercises and arms build-up of the bellicose forces at home and abroad that seriously threaten national security and peace."

As well as the communist North's deadly shelling of Yeonpyeong island, Seoul also accuses the North of sinking one of its warships in March near the disputed border in the Yellow Sea, a charge Pyongyang strongly denies.

The conciliatory tone of the editorial is in stark contrast to the bellicose language used by North Korea for much of the year as relations with Seoul dived.

However, it did warn: "The danger of war should be removed and peace safeguarded in the Korean peninsula.

"If a war breaks out on this land, it will bring nothing but a nuclear holocaust."

In December, the impoverished North warned it was ready for a "sacred war" using its nuclear weapons as the South held a live-fire drill in a show of strength.

"The editorials hint the North will wait for the China-US summit this month and the US-South Korea annual joint military drill in March to decide its course of action between dialogue and confrontation," Yang told AFP.

Pyongyang reportedly offered nuclear concessions to US politician Bill Richardson in a visit last month but Seoul and Washington have expressed scepticism about the North's apparent overtures.

Pyongyang pulled out of nuclear talks involving the two Koreas, the United States, Russia, China, and Japan in April 2009 and ordered UN nuclear inspectors out of the country.

It staged a second nuclear test a month later.

Hong Hyun-Ik, senior researcher at the private Sejong Institute, wrote in the independent Hankyoreh daily that the North would conduct a third nuclear test unless the mood turns toward dialogue following the Sino-US summit.

Cheong Seong-Chang, another analyst at the Sejong Institute, said North Korea needs tension reduction to achieve the goal of improving living standards.

"This is why the North appears to be self-contradictory in denouncing the South's policy toward the North while emphasizing the need for improving inter-Korean relations," Cheong said.

Much of the annual editorial, which is regarded as setting the direction of policy in the secretive country for the coming year, focused on improving living standards in North Korea, which suffers chronic food shortages.

Leader Kim Jong-Il was quoted as saying: "We should bring earlier the bright future of a thriving nation by making continuous innovations and advance, full of confidence in victory."

earlier related report
Ex-general named to head S.Korea crisis management team
Seoul (AFP) Dec 31, 2010 - A retired army general was named Friday to head South Korea's new presidential team to oversee the handling of national emergencies such as a sudden attack by North Korea.

Ahn Kwang-Chan, a military policy specialist, became a presidential secretary and head of the office for national crisis management, the president's office said.

Ahn, 54, previously served as head of the defence ministry's policy bureau. The new office will focus on predicting and managing a security crisis.

South Korea's national security system has faced fierce domestic criticism since the North's torpedo attack on a South Korean warship in March, and especially after the North last month shelled a South Korean border island.

The attack killed four people, including civilians, and prompted claims the South's response was too feeble.

In a New Year message, South Korean Defence Minister Kim Kwan-Jin ordered the military to maintain combat preparedness against any fresh attacks.

"If the enemy provokes again, we shall use all possible combat capabilities to win until the enemy surrenders," he said.



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