Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

SLUG: 2-299966 Kim Dae Jung Farewell DATE: NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=02/24/03

TYPE=KIM DAE-JUNG FAREWELL (L - ONLY)

NUMBER=2-299966

BYLINE=AMY BICKERS

DATELINE=TOKYO

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: Outgoing South Korean President Kim Dae-jung urged the United

States Monday to hold direct talks with North Korea to resolve the

Korean Peninsula's mounting nuclear crisis. As V-O-A's Northeast Asia

correspondent Amy Bickers reports, U-S Secretary of State Colin Powell

is bringing a very different message to Mr. Kim's successor.

TEXT: In a nationally televised farewell speech Monday, South Korea's

outgoing president, Kim Dae-jung, said direct talks between Washington

and Pyongyang were vital to resolving the dispute over North Korea's

nuclear weapons program.

This notion is in contrast with Washington's desire for multilateral

talks that include North Korea's neighbors - a policy U-S Secretary of

State Colin Powell will be pushing when he meets with Mr. Kim's

successor on Tuesday.

President Kim, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing better

relations with the North and holding a summit with Northern leader Kim

Jong Il, also called on Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear ambitions.

The nuclear crisis erupted in October, when U-S officials said North

Korea had admitted to pursuing a secret nuclear weapons program, in

violation of international non-proliferation pacts. The crisis escalated

as Pyongyang kicked out U-N nuclear inspectors, pulled out of the

nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and threatened to resume missile

testing.

Pyongyang is demanding a non-aggression treaty with the United States to

guarantee its security, and says it wants to discuss the matter only

with Washington. Washington says it will talk to the North, but it also

wants North Korea's neighbors - Japan, China and South Korea - to join

in the dialogue.

Secretary of State Powell delivered this message to Japanese and Chinese

officials over the past few days, and this is expected to be the

dominant theme in Mr. Powell's talks with the new president, Roh

Moo-hyun.

In his address Monday, President Kim called the American military

presence "beneficial" to Korea, and said that even if the two Koreas

should eventually reunify, the American military should stay. The North

and South have remained technically at war since 1953, when the Korean

War ended with a ceasefire instead of a peace treaty, and the United

States has based troops in the South ever since to counter any threat

from the North. There are currently 37-thousand U-S troops based in the

South.

Mr. Kim also expressed strong support for his successor.

President-elect Roh has pledged to continue Mr. Kim's policy of engaging

Pyongyang in dialogue, and promoting joint projects aimed at encouraging

peaceful ties and helping the North's impoverished economy. (SIGNED)

NEB / AB / BK