UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Military

SLUG: 2-286659 Bush/South Korea (L-Update)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=02/20/2002

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

NUMBER=2-286659

TITLE=BUSH/SOUTH KOREA (L-UPDATE)

BYLINE=SCOTT STEARNS

DATELINE=SEOUL

CONTENT:

VOICED AT:

/// EDS: UPDATES 2-286654 ///

INTRO: President Bush says he wants to open talks with North Korea, despite his portrayal of that country as a threat to world peace. V-O-A's Scott Stearns reports, the president visited the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea Wednesday, promising continued support for South Korean efforts at reunification.

TEXT: Driving past tank traps and mine fields, President Bush came to the end of the line for South Korea's unification railway, where the tracks stop at the heavily-fortified border. North Korea has refused to resume road or rail links between the countries, divided for more than 50 years.

President Bush called on North Korean leaders to bridge that gap, saying they should honor their promise to build a highway between the cities of Munsan, in the South, and Kaeson, in the North.

/// BUSH ACT ///

That road has the potential to bring the peoples on both sides of this divided land together. And for the good of all the Korean people, the North should finish it. Traveling south on that road, the people of the North would see, not a threat, but a miracle of peaceful development Asia's third-largest economy that has risen from the ruins of war.

/// END ACT ///

If North Korea completes the road south, President Bush says, its people would see more than the physical wealth of South Korea. They would see what he calls "creativity and spiritual freedom."

/// SECOND BUSH ACT ///

They would see a great, hopeful alternative to stagnation and starvation. And they would find friends and partners in the rebuilding of their country.

/// END ACT ///

Mr. Bush visited the Dorasan train station and signed a concrete railway tie, writing: "May this railroad unite Korean families." South Korea finished work on its side of the border earlier this month. North Korea has yet to start construction.

Speaking through an interpreter, South Korean President Kim Dae Jung says he hopes the railway is reconnected soon, making a now empty train station into a place of hope.

/// KIM ACT ///

The crowds and cargo are nowhere to be seen. It is a dormant train station. The reason is the demarcation line that blocks its path. The scene we are witnessing is the last vestige of the Cold War in the world.

/// END ACT ///

Following an earlier meeting with President Kim, Mr. Bush called North Korean leaders "despotic" for allowing their own people to starve while the military develops weapons of mass destruction. The president repeated his concerns that North Korea threatens world peace because it could help terrorists acquire chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons.

But, he says, neither the United States, nor South Korea have any intention of attacking North Korea. He says both he and President Kim agree that dialogue is the best way to achieve peace on the Korean peninsula.

/// THIRD BUSH ACT ///

We are prepared to talk with the North about steps that would lead to a better future, a future that is more hopeful and less threatening, but like this road left unbuilt, our offer has gone unanswered. Someday, we all hope the stability of this peninsula will be built on the reconciliation of its two halves.

/// END ACT ///

President Bush says people on both sides of the Korean border want to live in freedom and dignity, without what he calls "the threat of violence and famine and war." He says "no nation should be a prison for its own people."

President Kim says there is no major difference between his "sunshine policy" to improve relations with the North and President Bush's concerns about North Korean development of weapons of mass destruction.

/// OPT /// South Korean protesters say the U-S leader's comments have raised tensions on the Korean peninsula. South Korean riot police scuffled with demonstrators Tuesday outside the military base where the president's plane arrived from Tokyo. /// END OPT ///

Thursday morning Mr. Bush will visit some of the 37-thousand U-S troops stationed in South Korea before leaving for China on the last stop of his week-long trip to Asia. (SIGNED)

NEB/SKS/TW



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list