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The Republic of Korea (ROK)
-- Adheres to three principles on the nuclear issue, including never
accepting the DPRK to own nuclear weapons, peacefully solving the nuclear issue
through dialogue, and playing a leading role in solving the nuclear issue.
-- If the DPRK agrees to give up its nuclear program, the ROK is willing to
provide 2 million kilowatt-hour of electricity annually to the DPRK by building
cross inter-Korean border power line.
-- The ROK hoped the DPRK would give up its nuclear program, and the other
countries concerned would make definite promises to realize the normalization of
bilateral relations with the DPRK andprovide security guarantee to the DPRK.
Russia
-- Keeping on pressuring on the DPRK is not right, and the emergent
provision of food and energy assistance should be realized by practical
approaches in the relevant mechanism.
-- Adheres to a nuclear-weapon-free Korean Peninsula.
-- The "package solution" to the nuclear issue that Russia had proposed had
not lost its feasibility, and Russia is willing to revise it if necessary.The
package solution refers to create a nuclear-weapon-free Korean Peninsula and
provide security guarantee for every country in the region, including the DPRK.
-- Agrees in principle to provide the DPRK with energy aid, butthe overall plan has not be finished.
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