Chattanooga Times Free Press

Diplomats press to deliver on anti-nuke vows

- BY JIM GOMEZ AND ANNABELLE LIANG

SINGAPORE — Asia’s top diplomats pressed North Korea on Saturday to turn a pledge to completely dismantle its nuclear arsenal into reality amid concerns it’s proceeding with its programs.

North Korea’s foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho, however, hit the United States in an Asian security forum in Singapore for certain “alarming” moves, including “raising its voice louder for maintainin­g the sanctions against” the North.

Those moves, Ri told fellow ministers, could make an agreement with the Trump administra­tion, including the North’s commitment to work toward complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, “face difficulti­es.”

China and Southeast Asian nations also faced calls in the Singapore meetings to rapidly conclude an effective nonaggress­ion pact that can help fend off possible clashes in the disputed South China Sea. Both sides have announced an agreement on an initial draft of a regional “code of conduct” they regarded as a milestone after 16 years of sporadic talks.

Alarm over rising trade protection­ism, which Asian government­s warn could stymie economic growth, dominated the meetings too, with Japan calling for the swift conclusion of a 16-nation Asian free trade agreement that does not include the United States.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said the rapprochem­ent between North Korea and the United States, along with completion of a negotiatin­g draft of the code of conduct for the South China Sea, are breakthrou­ghs. But he added “like any other breakthrou­gh in diplomatic negotiatio­ns, they may lead to something great, they may lead to nothing.”

“Now the hard work is really on the details,” Cayetano told reporters before walking into daylong meetings between the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations and their partners the United States, China, Japan and South Korea.

ASEAN foreign ministers, along with counterpar­ts from China, Japan and South Korea, urged the U.S. and North Korea “as well as concerned parties to continue working toward the realizatio­n of lasting peace and stability on a denucleari­zed Korean Peninsula,” according to a draft communique they were to issue after their meetings Saturday, which was seen by The Associated Press.

In the communique, they would “note” — often a diplomatic subtlety for a reminder — the “stated commitment” of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the North’s formal name, “to complete denucleari­zation and its pledge to refrain from further nuclear and missile tests during this period.”

A summary of a new report by experts monitoring U.N. sanctions against North Korea, which was sent to the Security Council Friday night and obtained by the AP at the United Nations, said North Korea has not stopped its nuclear and missiles programs and continues to defy the sanctions resolution­s.

The North was also violating sanctions by transferri­ng coal at sea and flouting an arms embargo and financial sanctions, the report said.

Ri said while North Korea has “initiated goodwill measures” including a “moratorium on the nuclear test and rocket launch test and dismantlin­g of nuclear test ground,” the U.S. has gone “back to the old, far from its leader’s intention.”

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