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NUKEWARS
No sign of major Myanmar nuclear drive: US
by Staff Writers
Naypyidaw (AFP) Nov 30, 2011


The United States sees no sign of a major nuclear weapons programme in Myanmar and hopes that the new regime will boost cooperation with the UN atomic watchdog, a US official said.

"We've looked at this fairly carefully and we do not see signs of a substantial effort at this time" on nuclear arms, the official told reporters accompanying Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on a landmark visit.

While Clinton will raise concerns about links to North Korea, the State Department official downplayed accounts by defectors that Myanmar has worked with Pyongyang to develop an advanced nuclear weapons system.

He said that the "primary" US concern was missile technology. In May, a US Navy destroyer intercepted a North Korean cargo ship in the South China Sea suspected of carrying missile parts to Myanmar.

Myanmar has "talked to us seriously about potential steps associated with the IAEA and other actions they are contemplating with respect to North Korea," the official added, referring to the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said this could include signing an additional protocol granting the IAEA greater inspection authority.

The United States will seek assurances of "a determination on the part of the government to discontinue activities that we believe are antithetical to the maintenance of peace and stability," he said.

In late 2010 the UN atomic watchdog asked Myanmar to be allowed to visit a number of suspect nuclear sites and facilities.

Clinton arrived in Myanmar Wednesday to test the waters of nascent reforms in the long-isolated nation, which this year nominally ended decades of military rule and launched dialogue with the opposition and ethnic minorities.

Senator Richard Lugar, the top member of the rival Republican Party on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has urged Clinton to put a top priority on assessing ties between North Korea and Myanmar.

A UN report released in November 2010 said North Korea was supplying banned nuclear and ballistic equipment to Myanmar, along with Iran and Syria.

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China will defend Myanmar interests: state media
Beijing (AFP) Nov 30, 2011 - China will not allow its interests in Myanmar to be "stamped on", the state-run Global Times newspaper said Wednesday, as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton headed to the isolated nation.

China has long been the primary supporter of the Myanmar junta and the military-dominated civilian government that succeeded it, but Beijing has maintained a neutral stance on Clinton's visit.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Wednesday that the government welcomed Myanmar's moves to "enhance contact and improve relations" with Western nations.

But the state-run Global Times newspaper, known for its nationalist stance, was more critical.

"China has no resistance toward Myanmar seeking improved relationships with the West, but it will not accept this while seeing its interests stamped on," the paper said in an editorial.

Myanmar has surprised observers with a series of reformist moves in the past year -- including shutting down work on a controversial dam project backed by Beijing -- leading to speculation it is trying to diversify its foreign policy.

The editorial said the decision to halt work on the Myitsone dam had brought "massive losses" to the state-run Chinese company that backed the project.

"This incident made some believe that Myanmar is showing goodwill to the West at the expense of Chinese interest," it added.

US President Barack Obama's administration, while saying it wants a cooperative relationship with a rising China, has recently gone on the offensive amid suspicions over Beijing's intentions.

Obama recently announced the stationing of US troops in Australia -- a clear sign of US priorities at a time of tight budgets -- and has pushed ahead a trans-Pacific free trade agreement that for now excludes China.



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NUKEWARS
US must press Myanmar on nuclear program: senator
Washington (AFP) Nov 28, 2011
The United States must press Myanmar to reveal the state of its nuclear program and any ties with North Korea as a condition for better relations, a key US lawmaker urged Monday. "An early goal of the tentative US re-engagement with Burma should be full disclosure of the extent and intent of the developing Burmese nuclear program," said top Senate Foreign Relations Committee Republican Richa ... read more


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