US envoy discusses NKorea trip with SKorean envoy
President Barack Obama’s special envoy conferred with South Korean officials Monday on the eve of a rare trip to North Korea aimed at bringing the communist country back to international nuclear disarmament talks.
On Monday, Bosworth met with South Korea’s chief nuclear envoy, Wi Sung-lac, to discuss the upcoming trip. He told Wi that the U.S. intentionally decided to start the North Korea trip from South Korea - a remark seen as meaning that the two allies are working closely together.
Stephen Bosworth’s three-day visit to Pyongyang starting Tuesday represents the first bilateral talks between the U.S. and the North since Obama took office in January. The two countries last met one-on-one on the sidelines of now-stalled six-nation nuclear talks in Beijing in December 2008.
Further details of their discussions were not immediately made available.
“It’s not an accident. We intended that,” Bosworth told Wi at the start of their meeting.
North Korea has pushed for direct talks with the U.S. since it pulled out of the nuclear negotiations in protest of international criticism of a rocket launch in April. The North claims it was compelled to develop atomic bombs to cope with what it calls “U.S. nuclear threats.”
Bosworth is scheduled to fly to the North from a U.S. air base near Seoul. While in Pyongyang, he is expected to meet with First Vice Foreign Minister Kang Sok Ju - the country’s top nuclear strategist and leader Kim Jong Il’s chief foreign policy brain, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.
Bosworth has shunned the media since arriving in Seoul on Sunday. Upon arrival at Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, Bosworth took a car from the tarmac without speaking to reporters.
The U.S., which denies making any threats, has said it is willing to engage the North in direct discussions but has stressed they must lead to an end of Pyongyang’s boycott of the disarmament talks that also involve China, Japan, Russia and South Korea.
As Bosworth arrived at the Foreign Ministry building in Seoul for talks with South Korean officials, about a dozen anti-U.S. activists rallied outside to urge the envoy to launch negotiations with the North on forging a peace treaty.
After his trip to North Korea, the U.S. envoy is to return to Seoul then travel on to Beijing, Tokyo and Moscow before flying back to the U.S. next week, according to the State Department.
Associated Press Writer Hyung-jin Kim contributed to this report.
The U.S. fought alongside South Korea in the 1950-53 Korean War that ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, leaving the divided peninsula still technically at war.
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