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NEW YORK, June 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Officials from the United States and the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) held talks Thursday in New York on
the prospects of resuming the six-party talks on the Korean nuclear issue.
The officials discussed the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula when they
were attending a two-day academic conference organized by Professor Donald
Zagoria of Hunter College.
Participants at the symposium included Ri Gun, director-generalof the DPRK
Foreign Ministry and negotiator on the nuclear issue, Joseph Detrani, the US
State Department's special envoy for the six-way talks, Jim Foster, director of
the State Department's Office of Korean Affairs, Henry Kissinger, former US
Secretary of State, George D. Schwab, president of the National Committee on
American Foreign Policy, and officials from South Korea and Japan.
Kissinger said at the end of the meeting that they had a "useful dialogue"
which was done "in a friendly spirit with intention to make progress."
He noted that "it depends on DPRK's decision when the six-partytalks will
be resumed."
Zagoria stressed that he is optimistic about the resumption of the
six-party talks, saying both US and DPRK officials had a "goodexchange of
views."
By June last year, three rounds of the six-party talks, which involved the
DPRK, South Korea, the United States, China, Japan and Russia, had been held.
The talks have since then been stalled as the DPRK accused the United States of
adopting a hostile policytoward Pyongyang.
To revive the talks, officials from the United States and the DPRK held
negotiations last November, December and this May respectively. Enditem
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