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North Korea Sends Top Diplomat To Russia Amid Tensions

KIM KWANG-TAE   12/11/10 08:35 AM ET   AP

Kimmy

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea warned Saturday that it is ready for an all-out war even as it dispatched its top diplomat to Russia amid a flurry of regional diplomatic efforts to defuse tensions over the North's deadly artillery attack on South Korea.

North Korean Foreign Minister Pak Ui Chun left for Russia, the North's official Korean Central News Agency said in a one-sentence report. No details were given, but Pak accused South Korea and the United States on Friday of pursuing a policy of hostility and confrontation and reiterated that North Korea needs its nuclear program to fend them off.

"We once again feel convinced that we have made the right choice in strengthening our defenses with the nuclear deterrent," the Russian news agency Interfax quoted him as saying in an interview.

The North's National Peace Committee also claimed that the U.S. and South Korea are pushing the situation on the Korean peninsula close to all-out war.

"The army and people of the (North) are ready for both escalated war and an all-out war," the committee said in a statement carried by KCNA. "They will deal merciless retaliatory blows at the provocateurs and aggressors and blow up their citadels and bases."

The harsh rhetoric comes two days after North Korean leader Kim Jong Il met in Pyongyang with Chinese State Councilor Dai Bingguo, Beijing's top foreign policy official. The two reached consensus on the situation on the Korean peninsula during candid and in-depth talks, China's official Xinhua News Agency said, without elaborating.

It was not clear whether the two discussed the North's Nov. 23 artillery attack on a South Korean island near the Koreas' disputed western sea border. The barrage killed four South Koreans, including two civilians.

China has been under intense international pressure to use its diplomatic clout to rein in North Korea, its ally.

On Friday, China briefed South Korea on Dai's meeting with Kim through a diplomatic channel, a South Korean Foreign Ministry official said Saturday, noting that North Korea's position appeared to remain unchanged. He did not elaborate and asked not to be identified because of the issue's sensitivity.

In Beijing, top Chinese nuclear envoy Wu Dawei gave his Japanese counterpart, Akitaka Saiki, a "detailed" briefing about Dai's talks with Kim, Japan's Kyodo News agency reported, citing Saiki.

Saiki declined to give further details, Kyodo said Saturday.

Meanwhile, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is to visit North Korea this coming week, raising the prospect of a diplomatic resolution to the tensions. He is to depart from the U.S. on Tuesday.

The diplomatic troubleshooter has made regular visits to North Korea and has also hosted North Korean officials in New Mexico. He helped win the release of Americans held in North Korea in the 1990s and traveled to Pyongyang in 2007 to recover remains of U.S. servicemen killed in the Korean War.

The flurry of diplomacy comes as South Korean President Lee Myung-bak expressed optimism during a trip to Malaysia that the reunification of Korea is drawing near.

"North Korea now remains one of the most belligerent nations in the world," Lee said in an interview published Friday in The Star, a Malaysian newspaper. But, he added, it's a "fact that the two Koreas will have to coexist peacefully and, in the end, realize reunification."

In a speech Thursday night, Lee made similar remarks, saying North Koreans have become increasingly aware that the South is better off. He did not elaborate on how their knowledge has expanded, but said it was "an important change that no one can stop."

"Reunification is drawing near," Lee said, according to the president's website.

He also called on China to urge North Korea to embrace the same economic openness that has led millions of Chinese out of poverty – and said that North Korean economic independence was the key to reunification.

Lee didn't give a specific timeframe for the reunification of the Korean peninsula, which was divided after the end of Japanese rule in 1945 and officially remains in a state of war because the Koreas' 1950-53 conflict ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

___

Associated Press writer Foster Klug contributed to this report.

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SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea warned Saturday that it is ready for an all-out war even as it dispatched its top diplomat to Russia amid a flurry of regional diplomatic efforts to defuse tensi...
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea warned Saturday that it is ready for an all-out war even as it dispatched its top diplomat to Russia amid a flurry of regional diplomatic efforts to defuse tensi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Hummel
01:43 AM on 12/21/2010
Now is the time. We want end to Nucleur proliferation. The S Koreans would be the ones to do that for us which has probably been decided. They have the air power to end it now. But maybe to late if they wait. Which is only reason North would not do anything.
03:19 PM on 12/13/2010
In spite of the strange public optimism expressed on Korean "reunification soon", what's the chances of a wars trifecta: Korea and the Middle East blowing up, adding to AfPak?
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
01:53 PM on 12/13/2010
we all agree that kim jong il is psychopathic, maybe even outright crazy.

suppose wikileaks produced a document showing talks between south korea and the US discussing a contingency policy for dealing with the north should it come to that and in that cable south korean and US officials refer to kim jong il as something like a naked-emperor. no, it didn't happen that way, but who is the editor of the information wikileaks leaks?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Hummel
01:44 AM on 12/21/2010
He may be but is looking pretty smart. Just buying time so they can get a dellivery system.
08:49 PM on 12/12/2010
Sorry, that's an insult to monkies.
08:47 PM on 12/12/2010
Who let the little monkey out of his cage ?
08:35 PM on 12/12/2010
Nice Soap Opera: The North, the South, and Western Cowboy with a can of gasoline.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
streetmagik
You can't fight in here this is the war room!!
07:22 PM on 12/12/2010
No? Still no handouts?? What if I kill a few more sailors, or wait how about I kidnap some Japanese - then can I have some fuel?? please? I can get everyone chanting 'we hate America', that's always good for some aid... hey is this thing on?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kingofthenet
Where is Your GOD, Now?
07:05 PM on 12/12/2010
Russia is going to read NK the riot act, No way they are happy.
06:54 PM on 12/12/2010
Thier out begging. Finally the Chinese realize what a liability this clown is and probably sent him home empty handed. This throwback will die soon and #1 son's power will most likely not last long. Just hope it ends peacefully.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Hummel
01:47 AM on 12/21/2010
I believe you are wrong. That is lib press. Reality is soon they will be able to deliver then no one is safe no matter how many planes South has.
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05:19 PM on 12/12/2010
Everyone should take a look at the national geographic documentary on North Korea. It's heartbreaking what that man has done to that country.
10:40 PM on 12/12/2010
what did he do?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
clearthinker16
reads, investigates and thinks before making stupi
02:03 PM on 12/12/2010
I think Russia, China and the rest of the world should cut off North Korea completely, no fuel, food, nothing, no flights over their territory, no ships landing, no trading, nothing.
10:40 PM on 12/12/2010
None of the reps from those countries care what you think
01:43 PM on 12/12/2010
wake up.
Koreans killing other Koreans while other countries watch on the side? Are these people aware that they're being used?
Hey, I'm not Korean. Fine with me!!!
10:41 PM on 12/12/2010
everyone is being used by the Gl0bal B@nking Powers, including whites from usa
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GeorgieMark
Cogito Ergo Sum
01:41 PM on 12/12/2010
I think that Russia China S.Korea and the USA have long realised that N. Korea is acting up to receive much needed international aid AGAIN!

Last time the N.Koreans issued bellicose declarations the 5 regional powers sat down and agreed to give N. Korea aid (oil, food, medicine) in exchange for complete halt of their nuclear programme. 10 years into the future and N. Korea has yet to make good on its word the International community gave up on providing aid and as a result, we're back to square one.

If the Kims think they can get their paws on western money they are sorrily mistaken, nobody is willing to give them so much as a dime since they've proven to be unreliable and dishonest.
10:42 PM on 12/12/2010
not as simple as you put it.
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booboo111
micro-bio
11:51 AM on 12/12/2010
Dear Leader is a very handsome man. No one can deny that. His style has a kind of casual elegance to it. Surely ahead of his time.
10:42 PM on 12/12/2010
no he's definitely not. not even by korean standards
10:42 AM on 12/12/2010
North Korea is becoming increasingly worried about China and the North Korea government becoming a puppet government controlled by China, after all the North Korea belligerents have died of various unnatural natural causes. As far as Russia is concerned their only query is how much can they get selling North Korea to the South Koreans after after all the North Korea belligerents have died of various unnatural natural causes.