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China has 'serious concern' at N. Korea launch: US official
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 26, 2012

China's Hu concerned over N. Korea rocket: US official
Seoul (AFP) March 26, 2012 - Chinese President Hu Jintao expressed "serious concern" about North Korea's planned rocket launch during a meeting Monday with US leader Barack Obama, a US official said.

Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser, told reporters that the North Korean issue was one of the first topics discussed by the two presidents on the sidelines of a nuclear summit in South Korea.

"The two leaders agreed to coordinate closely in responding to this potential provocation and registering our serious concern to the North Koreans and, if necessary, consider what steps need to be taken following a potential satellite launch," Rhodes said.

While the North says its scheduled mid-April launch will put a satellite into orbit, the US and its allies say it will test long-range missile technology that could deliver a warhead.

"Given China's relationship with North Korea, its influence on North Korea, the president felt it was very important for us to be working closely with China and for China to be sending a very strong message to North Korea," Rhodes said.


China has expressed "serious concern" to its ally North Korea about a planned rocket launch, a US official said Monday after talks between President Barack Obama and President Hu Jintao.

The leaders met a day after Obama made an unusually blunt appeal to Beijing to get tougher with Pyongyang.

Numerous nations have strongly criticised the launch set for mid-April. The nuclear-armed North insists it will only put a satellite into orbit, while its opponents say it will test missile technology that could deliver a warhead.

China, the North's sole major ally and its biggest trade partner and aid provider, is seen as one of the few nations that can influence the regime.

"The two leaders agreed to coordinate closely in responding to this potential provocation and registering our serious concern to the North Koreans and, if necessary, consider what steps need to be taken following a potential satellite launch," said Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser.

Given China's influence, Obama "felt it was very important for us to be working closely with China and for China to be sending a very strong message to North Korea", Rhodes said.

The Chinese "have indicated to us that they take this very seriously, that theyve registered their concerns with the North Koreans," he told reporters.

Beijing would work actively with Washington and other six-party talks members "to make clear to the North Koreans the very grave concerns that the international community has if they go forward with this provocative act".

The now-stalled six-party forum, grouping the two Koreas, Russia, China, the US and Japan, has been trying since 2003 to negotiate an end to the North's atomic weapons programme.

Obama and Hu met before the start of a nuclear terrorism summit in South Korea which has been overshadowed by the launch and by Iran's suspected attempts to develop nuclear weapons.

Obama made it clear Sunday that he did not believe China's approach to its wayward neighbour was bearing fruit.

It was not working for China to turn "a blind eye to deliberate provocations, trying to paper over these not just provocative words but extraordinarily provocative acts that violate international norms", he said.

The US and many other nations say a launch would breach UN resolutions. Washington says it also violates a US-North Korean deal reached only last month, which offered US food aid in return for a partial nuclear freeze and a missile test moratorium.

On Iran, Rhodes said Obama and Hu welcomed upcoming diplomatic efforts by the P5 plus One group to end the nuclear standoff.

"We of course underscored that we need to move forward with a sense of urgency in these talks," he said.

The five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany are trying to broker a solution but Obama warned earlier Monday that "time is short".

On Sudan, the US and Chinese leaders agreed to stay coordinated "and send a clear message to both sides they need to make efforts to cease violence", Rhodes said.

Obama and Hu, holding their 11th meeting, were attempting to keep ties stable despite domestic political turbulence in both nations. A new generation of leaders is poised to assume power in China and Obama is fighting for re-election.

Obama must watch his flank as his likely Republican foe Mitt Romney lacerates his policy towards Beijing, seeking to exploit a perception among blue-collar voters that unfair Chinese trade practices are costing US jobs.

Hu entered the Obama meeting against a backdrop of intrigue ahead of the 18th Communist Party Congress later this year, expected to enshrine Xi Jinping as China's next leader.

Their meeting came after China's Communist Party leadership was rocked by a rare scandal. Bo Xilai, leader of the Chongqing metropolis, was sacked after a key aide reportedly tried to defect to the United States.

"I think the summit meeting is very important for both countries, especially on the domestic side, given the election year in the US and the political earthquake surrounding the removal of Bo Xilai," said Zhu Feng, professor of international relations at Peking University.

"There needs to be an exchange of views on how bilateral relations can stay the same without too many disruptions over election politics and domestic factors," he said.

Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
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Seoul nuclear summit: the threat
Seoul (AFP) March 26, 2012 - South Korea is hosting the second world Nuclear Security Summit, a gathering first convened in 2010 by US President Barack Obama with the goal of securing vulnerable nuclear material by 2014.

Following are key facts on the summit and the nuclear terror threat it is aiming to address:

-- Obama first outlined plans for the summit in a 2009 speech citing the threat of nuclear terrorism -- terror acts using a nuclear blast or the spread of radiation -- as the most serious threat to global security.

-- Concern had been building following the September 11, 2001 US attacks, the worldwide proliferation of nuclear material, and efforts by North Korea and Iran to develop atomic programmes in defiance of international wishes.

-- As much as 1,600 tonnes of weapons-grade highly enriched uranium (HEU) and 500 tonnes of plutonium exist in the world, sometimes stored under questionable security, according to a briefing paper by the summit's organisers.

-- Obama said in a speech in Seoul Monday that "just the smallest amount of plutonium -- about the size of an apple -- could kill hundreds of thousands and spark a global crisis."

-- Only about 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of HEU or eight kilograms of plutonium would be required to build a working nuclear bomb, according to figures provided by the summit's organisers.

-- There are many other radioactive sources such as nuclear power plants, research facilities and hospitals, which store isotopes used in treating cancer and other conditions. Security experts say this material could be used by terrorists to spread contamination through a "dirty bomb".

-- The International Atomic Energy Agency has confirmed 20 cases of theft or loss of HEU or plutonium in the past two decades and hundreds more cases of other radioactive material going missing.

While no terrorist groups are yet known to have acquired fissile material, Obama said Monday that Al-Qaeda had actively sought nuclear weapons.



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N. Korea parliament to meet amid rocket launch tensions
Seoul (AFP) March 24, 2012
North Korea said Saturday it would hold an annual parliamentary session next month around the time of a planned rocket launch by the nuclear-armed state that has sparked widespread condemnation. The meeting of the rubber-stamp body will also take place just two days before deceased founder Kim Il-Sung's 100th birthday and will be the first under new leader Kim Jong-Un. Pyongyang's offici ... read more


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