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Bush presses UN on NKorea sanctions
WASHINGTON—President Bush urged the U.N. Security Council to pass a
resolution Saturday that would clamp nonmilitary sanctions on North
Korea for the nuclear test it claims to have conducted earlier this
week.
"By passing such a resolution, we will send a clear message to the North
Korean regime that its actions will not be tolerated," Bush said
Saturday in his weekly radio address.
Uncertainty remains about whether North Korea actually detonated a
nuclear device. So far, no trace of radioactive material has been found
in air samplings conducted by the United States, China and Japan.
Either way, Bush called the underground explosion a threat to
international peace and stability. He is dispatching Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice to China, South Korea and Japan next week to assess the
security situation in the region.
"With its actions this week, the North Korean regime has once again
broken its word, provoked an international crisis and denied its people
the opportunity for a better life," Bush said. "We are working for a
resolution to this crisis."
Critics of Bush's foreign policy say the apparent nuclear test is
evidence that the administration's approach to North Korea has failed.
Democrats say that since Bush became president, both North Korea and
Iran have bolstered their nuclear weapons capabilities.
The U.N. Security Council was scheduled to vote Saturday on a resolution
that would impose nonmilitary sanctions on the repressive regime. The
latest draft says any further action the council might want to take
would require a new resolution.
The resolution also eliminates a blanket arms embargo, instead targeting
specific equipment for sanctions, including missiles, tanks, warships
and combat aircraft. The draft prevents the sale or transfer of luxury
goods and material and technology that could contribute to North Korea's
nuclear, ballistic missile or other weapons of mass destruction-related
programs.
It would also freeze the financial assets of individuals and entities
with any connection to North Korea's weapons or missile programs as well
as a travel ban on those associated with the programs.
In admonishing North Korea's purported nuclear test, Bush has accused
Pyongyang of being one of the world's leading proliferators of missile
technology, including transfers to Iran and Syria.
According to U.S. officials and outside experts, Pyongyang has sold
military goods to at least 18 countries, mostly in Africa and the Middle
East. But North Korea's customer list, going back to the mid-1980s, is
said to go well beyond Iran and Syria. U.S. officials, recent public
assessments and outside experts report sales of missiles or related
components to Egypt, Iran, Pakistan, Libya, Syria, the United Arab
Emirates and Yemen.—Agencies |