North Korea gives ultimatum on N-deal
October 6, 2008 SEOUL (AFP) - North Korea has given the US an ultimatum to accept its proposed solution to the latest nuclear row between the two sides, a pro-Pyongyang newspaper said Monday.
“The North Korean side appears to have suggested ways to peacefully resolve the nuclear dispute, through the top US negotiator to six-party talks and issued an ultimatum related to this,” said Choson Sinbo, newspaper of a pro-Pyongyang Korean group in Japan.
It gave no details but predicted a breakthrough if Washington responds positively to the proposals. Hill visited Pyongyang last week to try to rescue a six-nation deal which is crumbling because of a dispute over verification of the North’s declared nuclear programme.
The US negotiator said on his return he had had “very substantive” talks but gave no immediate details.
“A bold and epochal solution might have been forwarded (from the North) as time is running short ahead of the US presidential election,” said Chosun Sinbo, which normally reflects the hardline communist state’s thinking. “The six-party talks, reactivated after North Korea’s underground nuclear test in October 2006, may break down if the two sides fail to reach an agreement,” it said.






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