US warns N. Korea against second test

Published October 18, 2006

WASHINGTON, Oct 17: The United States on Tuesday warned North Korea against conducting a second nuclear test and flatly dismissed its claim that UN sanctions imposed after its first test amounted to a declaration of war.

As US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice headed to Asia and Russia to firm up support for enforcing those punitive measures, White House spokesman Tony Snow indicated that Washington expected Pyongyang to carry out a second test explosion.

“The North Koreans have made no secret of their desire to be provocative,” he told reporters. “It would not be a good thing for them, but it certainly would not be out of character.”

Asked to elaborate, Mr Snow noted that the UN Security Council had unanimously adopted sanctions on North Korea after its test on Oct 9 and added that if North Korean leaders ‘believe that somehow people are going to give them a pass on this, they’re going to find out that they’re wrong’.

Mr Snow also shrugged off Pyongyang’s announcement, in one of its harshest statements in years, that it viewed UN sanctions imposed after the first test as ‘a declaration of war’ and that it was ready for battle.

“I don’t think North Korea has declared war. I think what it did is it tried to characterise the UN resolution as an act of war, which it is not,” said the spokesman.

Separately, a US intelligence official said that activity detected at potential North Korean test sites could be consistent with preparations for a second nuclear test but not necessarily evidence a test is imminent.

“How close they may be to pulling the chain or pressing a button is what’s not clear,” said the official.

“I think it is reasonable to expect the government of North Korea will do what it can to test the will, the determination and the unity of the United Nations, the United Nations Security Council, and the other members of the six-party talks,” said Mr Snow.

Those negotiations, stalled since November last year, group China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the United States in an effort to convince North Korea to give up nuclear weapons in exchange for economic aid and an end to its international isolation.

Ms Rice, seeking to prepare an even tougher response to any second nuclear test, left Washington on Tuesday and was scheduled to hold talks with Japanese leaders in Tokyo on Wednesday and then meet together with her Japanese and South Korean counterparts in Seoul on Thursday.

The top US diplomat will then meet Chinese leaders in Beijing before heading to Moscow.

North Korea walked away from the six-party talks on its nuclear program a year ago, after the United States imposed sanctions on an Asian bank alleged to be acting as a clearinghouse for illicit North Korean trade and finance activities.

Ms Rice’s top envoy on the Korean issue, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, warned in Seoul that Washington would regard a second nuclear test as ‘a very belligerent answer’ from North Korea and said the international community would respond ‘very clearly’ to such an action.

PYONGYANG PLEA: North Korea warned the world on Tuesday against following the United States in trying to enforce new UN sanctions, calling the measures a ‘declaration of war’ and stressing it was ready for battle.

In one of the North’s harshest statements in years, Pyongyang rejected the sanctions imposed after it tested an atomic bomb last week and lashed out at both the United States and the UN Security Council.

The combative statement underlined North Korea’s unwillingness to bow to international pressure, which had been mounting for months before the Council’s vote on Saturday to punish it for its nuclear test.

“The DPRK wants peace but is not afraid of war,” the foreign ministry said, referring to the country’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

“We will deliver merciless blows without hesitation to whoever tries to breach our sovereignty and right to survive under the excuse of carrying out the UN Security Council resolution,” a ministry spokesman said.—AFP

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