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North Korea calls for fresh six-party talks

By the CNN Wire Staff
North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kae-Gwan (center) departs the US Mission to the United Nations on July 28.
North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kae-Gwan (center) departs the US Mission to the United Nations on July 28.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • A senior North Korean official made a rare visit to the United States last week
  • North Korea wants to resume six-party talks on nuclear disarmament
  • The North wants those talks to resume without preconditions
  • The U.S. and South Korea want the North to show first that it's serious about disarmament
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(CNN) -- North Korea reiterated its call Monday for a resumption of six-party talks without preconditions, its state-run news agency reported from Pyongyang.

The call follows a rare visit to the United States by North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kae-Gwan, who met with senior U.S. officials last week. It was the first direct meeting between North Korean and U.S. officials since North Korea pulled out of six-party talks in 2008.

In addition to the United States and North Korea, the six-party talks involved China, Japan, Russia and South Korea. The goal was nuclear disarmament on the Korean peninsula.

North Korea has called for the resumption of six-party talks without preconditions before. The United States and South Korea, however, have insisted on some tangible demonstration that North Korea is serious about denuclearization.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said recently, for example, that the United States hoped to determine in its meetings with the North Korean foreign minister whether North Korea is ready to "take concrete and irreversible steps toward denuclearization."