Bush, Roh brush off gaps, stress unity on NK (Agencies) Updated: 2005-06-11 10:45
President Bush and South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun pressed North Korea to
rejoin deadlocked talks on its nuclear weapons program on Friday.
 President Bush,
listens as South Korea's President Roh Moo-hyun, left, talks in the Oval
Office of the White House Friday, June 10, 2005 in Washington.
[AP] | "South Korea and the United States
share the same goal, and that is a Korean peninsula without a nuclear weapon,"
Bush said with Roh at his side in the Oval Office.
Roh, whose government has resisted the tougher approach advocated by the Bush
administration toward ending the impasse, said he agreed that six-nation talks
remain the best way to persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
While Bush emphasized that the two allies "are of one voice" on the issue,
Roh, who is presiding over a South Korea newly assertive about its role in the
region, raised the issue of remaining differences.
"There are, admittedly, many people who worry about potential discord or
cacophony between the two powers of the alliance," he said through a translator.
Roh opposes military action if diplomacy with North Korea fails. South Korea
also is cool to the idea of taking the North Korean standoff to the U.N.
Security Council for possible sanctions.
South Korea instead is pursuing a policy of engagement with the North and
supports a security guarantee or economic incentives to entice North Korea to
return to six-nation talks it has boycotted for nearly a year.
Bush, however, wants South Korea — as well as China — to take a more
aggressive stance.
The president said Friday he had no new inducements for North Korea beyond
those offered last June, when the North was told it could get economic and
diplomatic benefits once it had verifiably disarmed. Anything else, in the U.S.
view, would amount to a reward for nuclear blackmail.
While insisting the U.S. has no intention of launching a military strike,
Bush also has steadfastly refused to take that option off the table. And the
administration is increasingly hinting it is closer to pursuing U.N. sanctions.
North Korea, widely believed to have enough weapons-grade plutonium for a
half-dozen nuclear bombs, has sent mixed signals on whether it will return to
negotiations with the United States, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia.
North Korean diplomats indicated earlier this week they were willing to come
back, but they set no date. A North Korean official later boasted his country
was adding to its nuclear stockpile.
With a unified stand the goal of the Bush-Roh meeting, diplomatic language
ruled the day.
Bush said five times that Seoul and Washington either "share the same goal"
or are speaking with "one voice." Roh said that the "one or two minor issues"
between the longtime allies could be worked out "very smoothly."
The South Korean indicated he and Bush were on the same page on "the basic
principles."
Roh campaigned in 2002 promising to put South Korea on a more equal footing
with the United States, using language some viewed as anti-American.
On North Korea, Roh's moves to engage — by coming out against government
change in Pyongyang and sending energy and food aid north — contrast with the
U.S. approach.
Bush administration officials have recently aimed harsh rhetoric at
Pyongyang, with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld saying North Korea is "a
living hell" for all but its elite and Vice President Dick Cheney calling North
Korean leader Kim Jong Il "one of the world's most irresponsible leaders."
The South Korean position reflects its strategic interests. A collapse of
its neighbor could send millions of refugees streaming southward and ravage
the South Korean economy. The country also fears a military strike could lead to
a devastating second Korean War.
Washington believes the North should be feared, not trusted, as a potential
supplier of dangerous weapons worldwide.
South Korea also has talked of boosting military exchanges with China, at a
time when Washington has shown concern about Beijing's military buildup. Seoul
has joined China in opposing a permanent seat for Japan on the U.N. Security
Council — something Washington supports.
And there are skirmishes over the 50-year-old U.S. military presence in South
Korea, due to fall by a quarter to about 24,500 troops.
The two countries also just signed an agreement for Seoul to shoulder less of
the cost of U.S. military personnel on its soil.
In April, South Korea vetoed plans to grant American command of forces on the
Korean Peninsula if the North's government falls.
None of those issues came up publicly.
"How do you feel, Mr. President? Wouldn't you agree that the alliance is
strong?" Roh said at the end of his opening statement, apparently startling his
host.
"I would say the alliance is very strong, Mr. President," Bush quickly
replied.
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