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South Korean leader under fire over handling of North

 
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Manner of Speaking



Joined: 09 Jan 2003

PostPosted: Sun Oct 15, 2006 11:40 pm    Post subject: South Korean leader under fire over handling of North Reply with quote

Quote:
South Korean leader under fire over handling of North
Posted: 16 October 2006 1305 hrs







SEOUL: South Korea's embattled president was hit with new criticism on Monday over his handling of North Korea as doubts surfaced about whether new UN sanctions against Pyongyang would be strongly enforced. Seoul came out in strong support of the UN Security Council's vote on Saturday to impose sanctions on the communist North after it announced it had tested a nuclear weapon for the first time.


But many here see the test as proof that President Roh Moo-Hyun's "sunshine policy" of engaging the North has failed, and complain that millions in aid money was instead used to develop an atomic weapon now threatening the South. Newspapers lambasted Roh after his government said that, despite the crisis, it would continue with cross-border industrial and tourism projects which have become a key source of cash for the impoverished North.


"The government and the ruling party are advised to please behave like grown-ups," the Chosun Ilbo, South Korea's largest-circulation daily, said in a pugnacious editorial. "Despite the emergency of having a nuclear-armed enemy just dozens of kilometres away from Seoul, they keep acting childishly," it said.


South Korea has repeatedly said it will not tolerate a nuclear-armed North, and the government quickly issued a statement underlining its willingness to implement the sanctions. Yet Seoul is still hoping to negotiate a solution and bring Pyongyang back to stalled six-way talks on its atomic programmes, averting a confrontation over sanctions that the North has warned are a "declaration of war".


Vice Foreign Minister Yu Myung-Hwan was to meet later on Monday with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Alexeyev, who on Sunday said he had met with North Korean officials and been assured Pyongyang was willing to negotiate. Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon will reportedly host US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso on Thursday, as the international community haggles over how to implement the sanctions.


Japanese officials also said Christopher Hill, the lead US negotiator in the stalled six-way talks, would hold meetings in Japan before going on to South Korea. But cracks in the global consensus were already emerging as the United States publicly pressed China to enforce the resolution, including inspections of cargo in and out of the North that Beijing had opposed.


"I'm quite certain that China has no interest in seeing the proliferation of dangerous materials from North Korea," Rice said Sunday. After China, South Korea is the main provider of food and aid to the North, where many South Koreans have relatives that they have not seen since the peninsula was divided six decades ago.


Despite those ties, however, new polls show that nearly 80 percent of South Koreans believe Roh's carrot-and-stick approach, aimed at coaxing Pyongyang's isolated regime back into the international fold, should now be abandoned. "The government should drastically change its way of thinking," the JoongAng Daily said, urging Roh to abandon the joint projects in the North -- Mount Kumgang, a tourism site, and the Kaesong industrial complex.


"If the government continues these projects, there will be no real profit for them. It would instead bring conflict with the United States and raise criticism of not upholding the (UN) resolution," it said.


The United States, one of South Korea's main allies, is also coming under increasing fire here over the North's test. A new poll Monday by the Korea Times found that 43 percent of South Koreans blame Washington for the test, with only 37.3 percent blaming the North Koreans who actually carried it out.


The results appeared to be a sign of growing doubt about US commitment to achieving a diplomatic end to the crisis instead, as North Korea says it fears, of wanting to simply topple Pyongyang's communist leadership. "The isolationist regime's sense of the US security threat may be overblown but not entirely groundless," the paper said. "So far, the Republican administration's North Korea policy has been a total failure." - AFP/so

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/235726/1/.html
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Mon Oct 16, 2006 5:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
The United States, one of South Korea's main allies, is also coming under increasing fire here over the North's test. A new poll Monday by the Korea Times found that 43 percent of South Koreans blame Washington for the test, with only 37.3 percent blaming the North Koreans who actually carried it out.



Does this surprise anyone but the slug which lives under the rock outside the door to my classroom?
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Rteacher



Joined: 23 May 2005
Location: Western MA, USA

PostPosted: Tue Oct 17, 2006 2:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't know how that poll was worded, but I doubt that most South Koreans who indicated that they "blamed Washington" are referring to anyone other than George Bush.

By early on describing how he personally loathed Kim Jong il, calling him a "pygmy" and humiliating Kim Dae Jung when he visited the White House by publicly repudiating his policy of opening to the North, Bush managed to insult the then popular heads of both North and South Korea.

Although Kim Jong il was pressured internally by his military hardliners to conduct the nuclear test, he probably could have resisted that move if Bush could have bolstered the diplomatic effort by showing at least some respect ...
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Beej



Joined: 05 Mar 2005
Location: Eungam Loop

PostPosted: Tue Oct 17, 2006 3:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rteacher wrote:
I don't know how that poll was worded, but I doubt that most South Koreans who indicated that they "blamed Washington" are referring to anyone other than George Bush.

By early on describing how he personally loathed Kim Jong il, calling him a "pygmy" and humiliating Kim Dae Jung when he visited the White House by publicly repudiating his policy of opening to the North, Bush managed to insult the then popular heads of both North and South Korea.

Although Kim Jong il was pressured internally by his military hardliners to conduct the nuclear test, he probably could have resisted that move if Bush could have bolstered the diplomatic effort by showing at least some respect ...


How do you know this? How can anybody in North korea pressure KJI to do anything since he is seen as God, santa claus and michael jordan all wrapped up into one in the eyes of the Norks.
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huffdaddy



Joined: 25 Nov 2005

PostPosted: Tue Oct 17, 2006 4:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rteacher wrote:
I don't know how that poll was worded, but I doubt that most South Koreans who indicated that they "blamed Washington" are referring to anyone other than George Bush.


Here's the poll. Not sure how it was worded though. Probably in Korean.

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200610/kt2006101517230011990.htm

Quote:
Four in 10 South Korean adults think the United States is the country most responsible for North Korea�s declared nuclear test on Oct. 9, a survey said yesterday.


In this article, they say the United States, not Washington or Bush.
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jinju



Joined: 22 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Tue Oct 17, 2006 4:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Beej wrote:
Rteacher wrote:
I don't know how that poll was worded, but I doubt that most South Koreans who indicated that they "blamed Washington" are referring to anyone other than George Bush.

By early on describing how he personally loathed Kim Jong il, calling him a "pygmy" and humiliating Kim Dae Jung when he visited the White House by publicly repudiating his policy of opening to the North, Bush managed to insult the then popular heads of both North and South Korea.

Although Kim Jong il was pressured internally by his military hardliners to conduct the nuclear test, he probably could have resisted that move if Bush could have bolstered the diplomatic effort by showing at least some respect ...


How do you know this? How can anybody in North korea pressure KJI to do anything since he is seen as God, santa claus and michael jordan all wrapped up into one in the eyes of the Norks.


In the eyes of the oridinary people, yes, he is seen as all that. In the eyes of the elite army leaders, not likely.
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