US: No Sign North Korea Meeting Terms For Nuclear Talks

Posted September 6th, 2011 at 7:35 pm (UTC-5)
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The United States says it has not yet seen signs that North Korea is prepared to meet conditions for resuming talks on nuclear disarmament.

A U.S. State Department spokeswoman made the comment Tuesday ahead of a visit to Washington by South Korea's nuclear envoy.

The spokeswoman said the United States and South Korea will assess the situation on the nuclear talks, but said the United States has so far not seen indications that North Korea is ready to meet its conditions to restart negotiations.

South Korea's nuclear envoy Wi Sung-lac is due to arrive in Washington on Wednesday to hold two days of talks with Stephen Bosworth, Washington's special envoy to North Korea, and Clifford Hart, who is expected to be named the chief U.S. envoy to six-nation talks on North Korea.

The United States, Russia, China, Japan and South Korea have been negotiating with impoverished North Korea for eight years to get it to give up its nuclear weapons programs in exchange for food, energy and aid. The talks have been frozen since Pyongyang quit the negotiations in 2008, and later resumed testing of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

North Korea has been seeking a resumption of the talks in recent months but South Korea and the United States have insisted that it first follow through on past promises to disarm.

During talks with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev last month, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il expressed a willingness to impose a moratorium on his country's nuclear program if the talks resume.

In July, nuclear envoys from the rival Koreas held rare talks on the sidelines of the ASEAN security conference in Bali, Indonesia. That was followed by a round of talks between North Korean and U.S. diplomats in New York.