On North Korea's big day, Kerry underlines conditions for talks
April 15, 2013 -- Updated 1116 GMT (1916 HKT)
South calm as North Korea threatens
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- John Kerry says North Korea needs to show its serious about denuclearization
- He says the North's actions can affect the situation in Iran and other countries
- Kerry spoke at the end of a three-day trip focused on the Korean situation
- Monday is a major holiday in North Korea
Are you from South or North Korea? Send us your views.
(CNN) -- As North Koreans celebrated the birthday on
Monday of their country's late founder, U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry urged the regime in Pyongyang to ditch its nuclear program and put
a lid on its fiery threats if it wants to hold talks.
"The United States has
made clear many times what the conditions are for our entering talks and
they haven't changed," Kerry said during an interview with CNN's Jill
Dougherty in Tokyo.
"The conditions have to
be met where the North has to move towards denuclearization, indicate a
seriousness in doing so by reducing these threats, stop the testing, and
indicate it's actually prepared to negotiate," he said.
Kerry was speaking at the
end of a three-day trip that focused on securing fresh commitments from
South Korea, China and Japan to try to persuade Pyongyang to return to
the negotiating table and renounce nuclear weapons.
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His visit followed weeks
of dramatic threats by Kim Jong Un's regime, including that of a nuclear
strike on the United States and South Korea.
There is uncertainty
about how advanced the North's nuclear weapons program is, but Kerry on
Monday reiterated the U.S. government view that Pyongyang doesn't yet
have the capacity to carry out a nuclear attack.
Last month, North Korea
scrapped the 1953 truce that effectively ended the Korean War and said
it was nullifying the joint declaration on the denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula.
It also recently pledged
to restart a reactor at its main nuclear complex that had been shut down
under an agreement reached in October 2007 during talks with the United
States, South Korea and four other countries.
Kerry said Monday that
the United States is concerned that North Korea's dogged pursuit of its
nuclear weapons program could have consequences elsewhere in the world.
"It is the belief of
President Obama, myself and the administration that what happens here
also has an impact on perceptions in places like Iran, the Middle East,
and elsewhere where we're engaged in nonproliferation efforts," he said.
Pyongyang insists that
its nuclear weapons are a necessary deterrent because of the threat
posed to it by the United States and its allies.
Multilateral talks on
North Korea's nuclear program have ended in failure in the past, and
Kerry said the United States isn't interested in going over old ground.
"We're not going to go
through another cycle of artificial negotiations that are geared to
simply attract some kind of aid or lull in events while they continue to
pursue their devices' designs," he said.
A U.S. State Department
official said Monday there are no plans to move toward direct talks,
"because North Korea has shown no willingness to move in a positive
direction."
Pyongyang on Sunday
rejected a different proposal for dialogue, one by South Korea last week
regarding the North's suspension of activity at the manufacturing zone
that the two countries jointly operate.
A statement via KCNA,
the state-run news agency, called the South's offer a "crafty trick" and
"empty words without any content."
And a KCNA commentary Monday was titled, "U.S. is to blame for escalating tension on Korean Peninsula."
Kerry's trip finishes on
one of the biggest dates on the North Korean calendar: "The Day of the
Sun," when citizens celebrate the birthday of the country's founder and
"eternal president," Kim Il Sung, who died in 1994. Monday is the 101st
anniversary of his birth.
Current leader Kim Jong
Un paid tribute Monday to Kim Il Sung, his grandfather, as well as his
late father, Kim Jong Il, by visiting the halls where both men lie in
state. It was believed to be the young leader's first public appearance
in two weeks.
Suspicions remain that the North could carry out a test of a mobile ballistic missile in the coming days.
Kerry said in Beijing at
the weekend that the United States and China are calling on North Korea
to refrain from any provocative steps -- including any missile
launches.
Pyongyang made good on
its promise to launch a long-range rocket around the time of Kim Il
Sung's birthday last year; the rocket broke apart after launch and fell
into the sea.
North Korea has made
more threats since then. It launched a rocket in December that
apparently put a satellite into orbit, and in response, the U.N.
Security Council approved broadening sanctions against the country.
Angered by those
sanctions, Pyongyang announced in January it was planning its third
nuclear test and more long-range rocket launches as part what it called a
new phase of confrontation with the United States.
It carried out an
underground nuclear bomb test in February, resulting in even tougher
sanctions. Those measures, along with joint U.S.-South Korean military
exercises in South Korea, prompted an intensification in the North's
threats.
CNN's Elizabeth Joseph and Tim Schwarz contributed to this report.
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April 15, 2013 -- Updated 1514 GMT (2314 HKT)
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