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US Shrugs Off NKorean Succession Talk  09/10 05:44

   WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Obama administration is greeting with a shrug an 
expected North Korean political convention that could see the public debut of 
the country's next ruler.

   World leaders come and go, even in totalitarian North Korea; the important 
thing, U.S. officials say, is for the country to live up to past nuclear 
disarmament promises.

   As North Korea hints that a meeting that could promote Kim Jong Il's son as 
successor is imminent, the United States has steered clear of prediction, 
saying it is uncertain whether a new leader would spark change.

   "We're watching the leadership process and don't have any idea yet how it's 
going to turn out," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said this week. 
She made clear that the U.S. goal is "to try to convince whoever is in 
leadership in North Korea that their future would be far better served by" 
giving up their nuclear ambitions.

   The meeting would be the biggest since a 1980 gathering where Kim Jong Il 
made his public debut as future leader. Kim reportedly is suffering from health 
problems and is thought to be grooming his youngest son, Kim Jong Un, to 
continue the ruling dynasty that began with Kim Jong Il's father, Kim Il Sung, 
who died in 1994.

   State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said it is hard to say whether new 
North Korean leadership would make a difference in U.S. policy. "Leaders of all 
stripes change around the world. Leaders don't live forever," Crowley said. 
"What we're looking for is a change in the direction of North Korean policy and 
North Korean actions."

   Should it convene, the North Korean convention would come amid a flurry of 
diplomatic activity among the five countries pushing the North to resume 
stalled nuclear disarmament negotiations.

   Obama administration officials say they are in deep consultations with 
China, Russia, Japan and South Korea, the other members of the six-nation talks.

   Envoys from China, which has pushed for the resumption of talks, and South 
Korea, which has accused North Korea of torpedoing one if its warships in 
March, visited the State Department last week. The Obama administration's top 
envoys on North Korea head to Asia next week for discussions with their 
counterparts in Seoul, Tokyo and Beijing.

   The sinking of the warship Cheonan is the latest hurdle for the long-running 
disarmament talks. A South Korean-led team of international investigators 
blamed the explosion on a torpedo fired from a North Korean submarine. North 
Korea denies any involvement.

   The top U.S. diplomat for East Asia, Kurt Campbell, asked Thursday whether a 
North Korean apology or admission of guilt is necessary for nuclear talks to 
resume, said, "It will be critical for there to be some element of 
reconciliation between the North and South for any process to move forward."

   There have been recent signs of an easing in North-South tensions. North 
Korea this week freed the crew of a South Korean fishing boat seized a month 
ago. The North also has asked the South for aid.

   Crowley said the United States is prepared to engage the North, even as 
Washington enforces tough sanctions.

   "We want, ultimately, North Korea to change its behavior. And we are 
prepared to adapt as we see change in North Korea's behavior," Crowley said. 
But "the onus is on North Korea to take steps to show its commitment to its 
international obligations, to be a more constructive neighbor."


(KA)


 
 
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