US envoy: Beijing, Washington in opposition to NKorea tests

epa05238715 (FILE) An undated handout file photograph made available on 04 March 2016 by the North Korean news agency KCNA shows the test-firing of new-type large-caliber multiple launch rocket system by the North Korean military. On 01 April 2016, according to media reports in South Korea, North Korea fired an unidentified projectile into the sea off its east coast. Tensions between North Korea and the west have intensified due to the west's implimentation of economic sanctions in response to North Korea's pursuit of nuclear weapons and test firing of delivery systems.  EPA/KCNA/HANDOUT SOUTH KOREA OUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY

 

BEIJING / AP

Pointing to stronger China-US cooperation on North Korea, a US envoy said on Thursday the two nations are united in their opposition to the North’s nuclear tests and worked together to develop the tough sanctions imposed in March.
Sung Kim, the US government’s top envoy for North Korea, told reporters in Beijing that China took as much part in drafting the UN Security Council’s March resolution as Washington or the Security Council did.
Both countries “remain united in our firm opposition to North Korea’s provocative and irresponsible behavior,” Kim told reporters after meeting his Chinese counterpart, Wu Dawei, over strategy toward North Korea. Kim declined to give details of their discussions.
The most recent sanctions include mandatory inspections of cargo leaving and entering North Korea and a ban on the export of coal and iron being used to fund its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. They were imposed in response to North Korea’s conducting its fourth nuclear test and a long-range rocket launch earlier this year in violation of Security Council resolutions.
US officials in the past have implied that Beijing was coddling its neighbour and Chinese officials at first appeared reluctant to agree to punishing new sanctions. That reluctance appeared to melt in February in the face of the North’s vows to conduct more tests despite sanctions and the condemnation of the international community. Kim said the US and other nations that had previously joined in six-party talks aimed at ending the North’s nuclear programs were still open to “credible and meaningful diplomacy” with Pyongyang.
Analysts say a fifth nuclear test could happen before North Korea holds a Workers’ Party congress in early May, providing Kim Jong Un with an opportunity to burnish his image as a powerful leader and further cement his grip on power.
Kim, the US envoy, said he hoped the congress, the first in 36 years, would help propel North Korea in a “much more constructive direction … in terms of undertaking serious economic reform, in terms of caring better for their own citizens.”

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