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NUKEWARS
Panetta heads to Asia with focus on N.Korea
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 21, 2011


US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta embarks Sunday on a tour of Asia to take the pulse of key allies as Washington prepares for rare direct talks with North Korea over its nuclear program.

In his first trip to the region since taking the helm at the Pentagon in July, the former CIA director will begin with a stop in Indonesia at the weekend before heading to Japan on Monday and South Korea on Wednesday.

The trip coincides with sensitive direct talks between the United States and North Korea in Geneva next week to try to lay the ground for reviving long-stalled nuclear disarmament negotiations.

Before any broader discussions, the United States and South Korea are insisting the North take concrete steps to demonstrate it is sincere about resuming the full six-party nuclear dialogue with Japan, Russia and China.

In meetings in Tokyo and Seoul, Panetta "will have an opportunity to discuss with his counterparts where we are in the diplomatic process," a senior defense official said.

The defense chiefs will examine what steps to take to bolster diplomacy, but also insure that they are prepared, should North Korea "choose to undertake a provocation," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"We are essentially exploring the proposition and trying to ascertain if the North Koreans are serious about engaging in nuclear diplomacy and serious about living up to their commitments under the six-party process," the official said.

In April 2009, the North formally quit the six-party forum, a month before staging its second atomic weapons test. In 2010, Pyongyang torpedoed and sank a South Korean ship and unleashed an artillery barrage on a South Korean island.

"If they are serious, and they are willing to take concrete steps, then there's a clear path back towards the six-party process and diplomacy," the defense official said.

"But that yet has to be seen."

Apart from diplomacy focused on North Korea, Panetta's talks in Tokyo are expected to cover missile defense plans, potential US arms sales and the controversial future of the US Futenma air base on the island of Okinawa.

The Pentagon chief travels to Seoul on Wednesday for a two-day stop with US-South Korean relations at a high point, after President Lee Myung-Bak's red carpet treatment this month in Washington and the approval of a free-trade agreement between the two countries.

Panetta was scheduled to meet Lee, Foreign Minister Kim Sung-Hwan and his counterpart, Kim Kwan-Jin, after South Korean and US forces staged a major joint exercise this week over the Yellow Sea that simulated dogfights with North Korea.

Before Japan and South Korea, Panetta will start his trip on the Indonesia island of Bali, where he is due to arrive Saturday before meetings with Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro to discuss maritime security and reforms in the country's military, another defense official said.

The United States last year resumed ties with Indonesia's special forces after a 12-year suspension following military reforms and pledges from Jakarta to safeguard human rights.

The Pentagon chief also will hold talks with defense ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on the sidelines of the bloc's meeting in Bali.

Disputes between ASEAN members and China over the resource-rich South China Sea will likely feature high on the agenda, as Washington has called for a regional code of conduct and insisted on "freedom of navigation" through the crucial global shipping route despite Beijing's territorial claims.

China says it has sovereignty over essentially all of the South China Sea, where its professed ownership of the Spratly archipelago overlaps with claims by Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia.

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N. Korea cuts food rations by two-thirds: UN
Beijing (AFP) Oct 21, 2011 - North Korea has slashed food rations by two-thirds and desperately needs foreign aid to feed millions of people, the UN humanitarian chief said Friday after visiting the communist state.

Donations to United Nations programmes have dwindled because of international irritation at the impoverished North's missile and nuclear push.

UN agencies have said that some six million people in the country urgently need food but a $73 million appeal for North Korea has only been 34 percent funded this year.

Valerie Amos urged foreign donors to give more as the harsh winter approached.

"There are real needs there, you can't let the people of North Korea suffer," Amos told journalists in Beijing after a five-day visit to inspect the humanitarian situation in North Korea.

"This is a country that is chronically poor and underdeveloped. There is no way, even with the best will in the world and best climate conditions, that the DPRK (North Korea) can feed itself."

Amos said this year's harvest was "about the same or slightly better" than in 2010, but it was still not enough to feed the population of 24 million people.

While the lack of arable land was partly to blame, Amos said other problems were soil degradation, poor quality seeds, limited fertiliser, adverse weather conditions and the lack of machinery to help harvest the crops.

North Korea faces an annual food deficit of one million tonnes and around a third of its children are chronically malnourished, said the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs.

The situation is even more dire in the country's north, where nearly half the children don't get enough food.

North Korea was hit by a famine in the 1990s which killed hundreds of thousands and the islolated country has relied partly on international food aid ever since.

But humanitarian support has fallen to a tenth of what it was a decade ago and Amos said daily food rations at government distribution centres had been cut from 600 grams to just 200 grams.

The rations were mostly maize, cabbage and rice "if they are lucky" with little or no protein provided.

Seoul suspended its annual shipment of rice and fertiliser in 2008. This year the North asked the United States and other nations for food aid, but there are differences over its requirements.

Some South Korean officials are sceptical, saying North Korea wants to stockpile supplies for handouts to mark the 100th anniversary next year of the birth of founder Kim Il-Sung.

Many governments have also raised concerns that food aid could be diverted to the North's 1.1-million-member army.

Amos said she saw no signs of food being diverted on her visit, during which she had "very frank discussions" with North Korean officials, who said they wanted to attract more foreign investment.

Amos said she was given access to "all the places I asked to see" which included orphanages, hospitals, markets, a food distribution centre and a communal farm.

However, better access for all humanitarian organisations, not just UN agencies, in North Korea was needed, she added.



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NUKEWARS
Little hope of progress in US-N. Korea talks: analysts
Seoul (AFP) Oct 20, 2011
The United States and North Korea will hold more direct talks to try to revive long-stalled nuclear disarmament negotiations, but analysts see little hope of an early breakthrough. The US State Department said the two sides would meet Monday and Tuesday in Geneva, following up on talks in July in New York, but cautioned that it was premature to consider a resumption of the full six-party nuc ... read more


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