April 12, 2013 -- Updated 1301 GMT (2101 HKT)
Secretary of State John Kerry, visiting Seoul on Friday, said the United
States is prepared to enter talks with North Korea -- but only if North
Korea is serious about denuclearization. FULL STORY
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April 12, 2013 -- Updated 1307 GMT (2107 HKT)
Making a diplomatic push in Korean Peninsula
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: The United States will defend itself and its allies if needed, Kerry says
- Kerry's Asia trip will include visits to China and Japan
- His three host nations all have new leaders
Kerry is in Seoul meeting
with South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se amid heightened
tensions spurred by North Korea's recent nuclear threats and
provocations.
He landed in Seoul, about
30 miles from the demilitarized zone separating the two countries. The
Korean peninsula is rife with tensions over the belligerent threats
issued by Pyongyang.
The United States will defend itself and its allies if needed, Kerry said.
"North Korea will not be
accepted as a nuclear power," he said at a news conference with Yun.
"The rhetoric that we are hearing is simply unacceptable."
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Pentagon intelligence
assessment suggesting North Korea may have the ability to deliver a
nuclear weapon on a missile has set off a flurry in Washington, with top
officials trying to play down concerns about the capabilities of the
Pyongyang regime.
The Pentagon's
intelligence arm has assessed with "moderate confidence" that North
Korea has the ability to deliver a nuclear weapon with a ballistic
missile, though the reliability is believed to be "low."
First disclosed by a
congressman at a hearing Thursday and then confirmed to CNN by the
Defense Department, the assessment by the Defense Intelligence Agency is
the clearest acknowledgment yet by the United States about potential
advances in North Korea's nuclear program.
The United States
calculates that a test launch of mobile ballistic missiles could come at
any time. But a senior administration official said there is no
indication that missiles that North Korea is believed to be readying for
tests have been armed with any nuclear material.
The surprising
development comes amid heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
North Korea has unleashed a torrent of dramatic threats against the
United States and South Korea in recent weeks, including that of a
possible nuclear strike.
Kerry's Asia trip will include visits to China and Japan. The tour comes at a time when all three countries have new leaders.
It's the first time the Obama administration is engaging with all three countries in the same trip, the State Department said.
The top U.S. diplomat's
trip comes days after he warned the North on what he calls leader Kim
Jong Un's "provocative ... dangerous, reckless" rhetoric and actions.
China, U.S. officials
say, is growing more concerned about the North's provocations, but it
also is closely watching Washington's latest military moves in the
region.
Kerry will try to
convince leaders in Beijing that Pyongyang is "putting China's own
interests at risk," a senior administration official said.
Pyongyang's provocations
are the immediate threat, but the Obama administration's "pivot to
Asia" has broader strategic implications for Beijing.
Throughout his Asia swing, Kerry will have to balance his short-term and long-term diplomatic objectives.
"Secretary Kerry can
reassure regional states that, as a Pacific century dawns, the United
States will continue to be right in the middle of it and will not allow
any power to edge the United States out of a region where nearly every
country welcomes its leadership," said Daniel Twining, the German Marshall Fund's senior fellow for Asia.
"He should also make
clear that the United States will not countenance aggression against any
territory covered by the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty and commit to
working closely with Japan to meet security challenges across Asia,
starting with North Korea."
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