North Korea to discuss nuclear talks in Moscow

North Korea has also offered to hold talks with the United States to ease tensions regarding its nuclear program.


Reuters June 29, 2013
During a trip to Beijing last week, North Korea's First Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Kye-Gwan said that the denuclearisation of the peninsula was the "dying wish" of North Korea's founder. PHOTO: AFP/ FILE

MOSCOW: North Korea's chief nuclear negotiator will meet senior Russian officials in Moscow next week, amid signs of a new push to get Pyongyang to re-join protracted talks over ending its atomic program, state media reported.

Kim Kye-gwan, North Korea's First Deputy Foreign Minister, will meet deputy foreign ministers Vladimir Titov and Igor Morgulov on Thursday "as part of efforts to resume the six-party talks," the RIA Novosti news agency reported.

The reclusive Asian state walked out of the discussions with South Korea, the United States, Japan, Russia and its main ally China in 2009 and has often said it will never abandon its nuclear weapons, calling them its "treasured sword".

But in a flurry of statements and visits this month, North Korea has offered to hold talks with the United States to ease tensions that spiked this year when the North threatened the United States and South Korea with nuclear war.

During a trip to Beijing last week, Kim Kye-Gwan said that the denuclearisation of the peninsula was the "dying wish" of North Korea's founder.

The White House has said that any talks must involve action by the North to show that it is moving toward disarmament.

Washington has been skeptical of Pyongyang moves towards dialogue in the past, saying it has repeatedly backtracked on deals.

The Obama administration kept up the pressure on North Korea this week by saying it was imposing sanctions on the country's Daedong Credit Bank for its role in supporting Pyongyang's weapons of mass destruction program.

The UN Security Council has also imposed a variety of sanctions on North Korea for Pyongyang's three nuclear tests and numerous missile launches, including an embargo on the import and export of nuclear and missile technology and a ban on all arms exports.

A spokesman from Russia' Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the RIA Novosti report published late on Friday.

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