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BEIJING, July 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Paving the way for the upcoming new round of six-party talks, a special representative of the Chinese president concluded his two-day visit to the DPRK and came back to Beijing Thursday afternoon.
Chinese State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan is the highest-ranking Chinese
official to visit the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) at the eve of
every new round of six-party talks.
After a thirteen-month deadlock, the DPRK last Saturday declared it
would come back to the negotiation table in two weeks. Meanwhile, US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice started her five-nation Asian tour in preparation for
the new round.
All above urgent arrangements are sending a message to the world: all
parties are placing more hope than ever before on the new round, and are
preparing for it as carefully as possible.
The recent remarks by the DPRK and the U.S. demonstrate their
determination to make progress in the upcoming new round of talks. DPRK leader
Kim Jong-Il told Tang that he hopes the new round can be held as scheduled and
achieve results. The US side also said the new round is "only the first step",
and the key point is to "make progress".
The other parties have also made contributions to the new round.
Chinese President Hu Jintao, in a meeting with Rice, said China hopes the good
momentum of accumulating common ground will be strengthened. The republic of
Korea believes there will be a more flexible and substantial discussion, and
that it will raise important proposals during the new round.
The fourth round of six-party talks, which was originally scheduled
to be held last September, has been postponed because of the mistrust between
the U.S. and the DPRK, as well as the US general election. Since then, the
peaceful dialogues on the Korean nuclear issue have seen twists and turns.
The new Bush administration this year called the DPRK a "tyranny
outpost", and in return, the DPRK declared it already has self-defensive nuclear
weapons.
Jin Linbo, a scholar at China's Institute of International Studies,
said that the international situation improved the chances for resuming talks.
The complicated Iraqi situation and political upheaval in Iran have convinced
all six parties to achieve security through peaceful talks.
Under these circumstances, both the DPRK and the U.S. have shown
positive signals to each other. The U.S. has recognized the DPRK as a sovereign
state, and has claimed it does not intend to invade it, and the two sides have
agreed to have bilateral contact within the six-party framework.
"Resuming the six-party talks is in conformity with the international
situation and the countries' own interests," said Jin.
The nuclear issue in the Korean peninsula started in 1990s. China
advocated to set up six-party talks mechanism, trying to peacefully solve the
Korean nuclear issue.
From 2003 to 2004, China, the DPRK, the U.S., the Republic of Korea,
Russia and Japan held three rounds of six-party talks in Beijing. From the first
round, which enabled the DPRK and U.S. to sit together, to the third round, in
which a detailed proposal was put forward, every step forward was arduous.
Experts are skeptical that the new round will make a breakthrough.
Shi Yinhong, professor with China's People's University, said the U.S. is giving
a last chance to the DPRK. Another expert, Zhang Liangui, said the new round of
talks can not afford failure. Shen Jiru, an expert at the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences, said the compromise is temporary as mistrust still exists
between the U.S. and the DPRK.
Whatever result the new round can achieve, it will not be easy to
maintain peaceful dialogue in dealing with such a sensitive and complicated
international issue. The common ground between the DPRK and the U.S. has
increased only gradually.
Patience and flexibility will continue to be key in the new round for
the settlement of the Korean nuclear issue. Enditem |