EQUIPO NIZKOR |
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05sep03
Beijing frustrated with US policy on North Korea.
China indicated further frustration with US policy towards North Korea yesterday by questioning the legitimacy of a plan to intercept ships and aircraft from the Stalinist state that are suspected of carrying exports for use in nuclear and chemical weapons.
China's foreign ministry, already disappointed by Washington's unyielding position, insisted yesterday that dialogue, not the seizure of North Korean ships and aircraft, stood a better chance of preventing nuclear proliferation by Pyongyang.
"We understand the concerns of some countries about the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction," said Kong Quan, the foreign ministry spokesman.
But asked whether he thought a planned exercise by the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), a grouping of 11 countries led by the US, constituted a provocation to Pyongyang, he said: "Many countries still question the efficiency and legitimacy of adopting this kind of measure."
At the end of the six-nation talks in Beijing last month, China said all participants had agreed to avoid words or action that might be construed as provocative. It was not clear, however, whether this consensus was supported by all six participants: the US, North Korea, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan.
Mr Kong stopped short of condemning plans by the PSI members - Australia, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain and the US - to hold air and ground interdiction exercises this month.
China's position on the PSI plan has been regarded as a determinant of its success because Beijing controls many of the sea lanes around the Korean peninsula and North Korea uses Chinese air space to fly shipments to its Middle East trading partners.
PSI, spearheaded by John Bolton, the hawkish US undersecretary of state, has been described as a strategy to prevent proliferation of weapons of mass destruction by any rogue state or terrorist group, not just North Korea.
However, Pyongyang will be PSI's first test because Kim Jong-il's regime has the most advanced nuclear and chemical weapons programmes of any rogue state and a history of exporting arms.
In addition to preventing proliferation, the US and its allies could also use interception of North Korean ships to put pressure on the country's fragile economy, which relies on exporting arms and other clandestine goods, including narcotics.
[Source: By James Kynge in Beijing and Andrew Ward in Seoul, Financial Times, London, UK, September 5, 2003]
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