The U.S.-led military
command monitoring the cease-fire on the Korean peninsula confronted North
Korea on Friday about the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship, calling it
a violation of the 1953 armistice.
Colonels from the U.N. Command,
who met at the border with counterparts from Pyongyang's Korean People's Army,
reminded North Korea of the U.N. Security Council order to honor the truce.
Officers also proposed a joint task force to discuss the "armistice
violations," the military commission said in a statement.
The 100-minute talks, which
took place at the "truce village" of Panmunjom inside the
Demilitarized Zone dividing the two Koreas, were the second round of talks
since the Cheonan went down off the Koreas' west coast on March 26, killing 46
South Korean sailors.
The two sides tentatively
agreed to meet again next Thursday, the U.N. Command said.
North Korea vehemently
denies involvement in the sinking of the 1,200-ton Cheonan, and has demanded to
be allowed to send its own investigators to South Korea to examine the results.
The North proposed that its
delegation composed of up to 30 investigators stay in the South for three to
five days or even longer to conduct field investigations and that the U.S.
guarantee all logistical support, the North's official Korean Central News
Agency later reported.
"If the 'results of
investigation' announced by the joint investigation team were objective and
scientific as claimed by the U.S. forces side, there would be no reason for it
to refuse to receive the inspection group," the North said, according to
KCNA.
A team of international
investigators concluded in May that a North Korean submarine fired the torpedo
that sank the warship in what Seoul called the worst military attack on South
Korea since the 1950-53 Korean War.
The U.N. Security Council
approved a presidential statement earlier this month condemning the incident,
but did not directly blame Pyongyang.
The U.N. Command, however,
blames North Korea for the incident and considers it a violation of the
cease-fire, a command official said Friday, speaking on condition of anonymity
because the results of the command's own investigation have not been released.
The meeting took place as a
North Korean official threatened a "physical response" if the U.S.
and South Korea carry out joint military exercises that U.S. Defense Secretary
Robert Gates said would be held to send a "clear message" to North
Korea to stop its "aggressive behavior."
North Korean spokesman Ri
Tong Il told reporters at an Association of Southeast Asian Nations meeting in
Hanoi, Vietnam, that the military exercises would be "another expression
of hostile policy against" North Korea. "There will be physical
response against the threat imposed by the United States militarily," he
warned.
The military drills are to
run Sunday through Wednesday with about 8,000 U.S. and South Korean troops,
about 20 ships and submarines and 200 aircraft, including the USS George
Washington aircraft carrier and the U.S. Air Force's F-22 stealth fighter.
Pyongyang routinely accuses
the U.S. and South Korea of staging the military drills as a rehearsal for an
attack on North Korea. Washington and Seoul say the exercises are purely
defensive and that they have no intention of invading the North.
The North's officers also
called on the U.S. to call off the planned military exercises, KCNA said,
saying the U.S. move is "a dangerous one of driving the situation on the
Korean peninsula to a war phase."
The U.S. stations 28,500
soldiers in South Korea to protect the ally against aggression.
Even as tensions were rising,
South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak said Friday that Seoul was willing to
expand humanitarian assistance for the impoverished rival, the Yonhap News
Agency reported.
"President Lee said
such a humanitarian aid should continue and stressed more active assistance is
necessary to help North Korea," Lee's spokeswoman Kim Hee-jung quoted him
as saying.
The about-face by the conservative president
comes as Pyongyang faces fewer sources of much-needed aid, with the U.N.
Security Council tightening sanctions because of its nuclear defiance and the
U.S. announcing new sanctions earlier this week
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