Rice Pledge to Protect Japan Cools North Korea Fears
The US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, yesterday called for the 'swift and effective' implementation of UN sanctions against North Korea and vowed that Washington would continue to protect its allies in the region amid growing fears of an arms race in the far east.
The US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, yesterday called for the "swift and effective" implementation of UN sanctions against North Korea and vowed that Washington would continue to protect its allies in the region amid growing fears of an arms race in the far east.
Ms Rice, in Tokyo on the first leg of a hastily arranged trip that will take in South Korea, China and Russia, urged countries in the region to support UN sanctions, which include inspections of North Korean cargo for nuclear materials.
"This is an especially important time for allies to work together," Ms Rice told reporters after talks with Taro Aso, the Japanese foreign minister. The US is expected to find it more difficult to persuade China to cooperate. Chinese support is seen as crucial to pressuring Pyongyang to return to negotiations, but Beijing has said it will stop short of boarding North Korean ships.
Ms Rice also sought to allay Chinese concerns that the sanctions would prompt a humanitarian crisis and a flood of refugees from North Korea. "This is not an embargo or a quarantine," she said. "The US has no desire to escalate this crisis. In fact we would like to see it de-escalate."
Her visit is also designed to reassure Japan that it can depend on the US for its security. "Obviously an event of this kind does carry with it the potential for instability in the relationships that now exist in the region," she said. "That's why it's extremely important to go out and to affirm, and affirm strongly, US defence commitments to Japan and South Korea."
Last Monday's underground test has prompted Japan, which considers itself high on Pyongyang's list of potential targets, to talk openly about the merits of developing its own nuclear deterrent.
After the talks Mr Aso said Japan, the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack, was "absolutely not considering a need to be armed by nuclear weapons".
"We do not need to acquire nuclear arms with an assurance by [Ms Rice] that the bilateral alliance would work without fault," he said.
Ms Rice, in Tokyo on the first leg of a hastily arranged trip that will take in South Korea, China and Russia, urged countries in the region to support UN sanctions, which include inspections of North Korean cargo for nuclear materials.
"This is an especially important time for allies to work together," Ms Rice told reporters after talks with Taro Aso, the Japanese foreign minister. The US is expected to find it more difficult to persuade China to cooperate. Chinese support is seen as crucial to pressuring Pyongyang to return to negotiations, but Beijing has said it will stop short of boarding North Korean ships.
Ms Rice also sought to allay Chinese concerns that the sanctions would prompt a humanitarian crisis and a flood of refugees from North Korea. "This is not an embargo or a quarantine," she said. "The US has no desire to escalate this crisis. In fact we would like to see it de-escalate."
Her visit is also designed to reassure Japan that it can depend on the US for its security. "Obviously an event of this kind does carry with it the potential for instability in the relationships that now exist in the region," she said. "That's why it's extremely important to go out and to affirm, and affirm strongly, US defence commitments to Japan and South Korea."
Last Monday's underground test has prompted Japan, which considers itself high on Pyongyang's list of potential targets, to talk openly about the merits of developing its own nuclear deterrent.
After the talks Mr Aso said Japan, the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack, was "absolutely not considering a need to be armed by nuclear weapons".
"We do not need to acquire nuclear arms with an assurance by [Ms Rice] that the bilateral alliance would work without fault," he said.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Rice Fails to Make Breakthrough in Middle East Peace Talks
- Rice to Meet Israeli and Palestinian Leaders
- Iraq Sacrifices Worthwhile, Claims Rice
- Rice Calls for Palestinian Cooperation
- Merkel Ousts Rice As Forbes' Top Woman
- Lebanon Rejects Un Truce Proposal Which It Claims Favours Israel
- Rice: Us Has Not Forgotten Palestinians
- Rice Insists Nuclear Talks Should Go Through Solana
- Rumsfeld and Rice Fall Out Over War Tactics
- Blackburn Mosque Cancels Rice Invitation
- Radio Host Fired for 'slip of the Tongue' Racial Slur Against Rice
- Rice Meets German Chancellor Amid Cia Row
- Detainee Flights Have Saved European Lives, Says Rice
- Rice Defends Us Treatment of Terror Suspects
- Israelis and Palestinians 'on Verge of Gaza Deal'
- Syria 'must Be Held to Account Over Hariri Death'
- Senate Presses Rice Over Iraq Exit Strategy
- Rice Too Busy for Women Foreign Ministers' Dinner
- Twice as Good
- European Union Backs Down on Demands to Share Internet Governance
- The Clash of the Koreans: Naval Skirmish in the Yellow Sea
- Freed Journalists were Forced into North Korea to be Arrested
- Hillary Clinton Not Hopeful that North Korean Relations will Improve
- US Reporter Held Captive in North Korea Calls Sister
- North Korea Fires Missiles, Continues to Antagonize the World
- North Korea Likely to Fire Missile Toward Hawaii in Coming Weeks
- North Korea Antagonizing World Powers, Threatens U.S. Ships
- North Korea Ignores World Powers, Conducts Nuclear Weapons Test
- U.S. Calls on North Korea to "Cease Its Provocative Threats"
- North Korea Missile Launch Prompts U.S. Anti-Missile Ships
- North Korea Accuses Obama of Infringing on its Sovereignty
- Condi Rice Accuses Hamas of Holding Gazans Hostage
- Playing the Waiting Game: How Kim Jong Il Beats the U.S.
- U.S. Bans Sales of iPods, Segways, and Harleys to North Korea
- The Nuclear Issue in North Korea



