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Beijing, June 5 -- A senior U.S. defense official says the US will make a
decision within weeks whether or not to take the North Korea nuclear issue to
the United Nations.
The official told reporters that this decision came from growing
frustrations over Pyongyang's failure to return to six-party negotiations aimed
at persuading the country to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
The senior Pentagon official said Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld only
briefly mentioned the subject in separate meetings in Singapore on Saturday with
his South Korean and Japanese counterparts.
Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Richard Lawless, now in Singapore with
Rumsfeld, was heading to Seoul later for further talks on the nuclear issue.
The Bush administration has long held out the possibility of asking the
U.N. Security Council to take action as a means of holding Pyongyang accountable
for breaking its international commitment not to pursue nuclear weapons.
But China and Russia, two of the five veto-wielding Security Council
members, have opposed such a move. Both are part of the six-party process, which
also includes the United States, Japan, and the two Koreas.
The senior defense official said he did not believe the U.S. administration
had formally approached other states about taking North Korea to the Security
Council.
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |