Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
16 January North Korea Special Weapons News
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- Daily Press Briefing State Department 16 Jan 2003 -- Radio Free Asia Budget Increase / Using Regional Powers to Secure Peace / Update Assistant Secretary Kelly's Visit to Asia
- NORTH KOREA/NUCLEAR VOA 16 Jan 2003-- A top U-S envoy says resolving the nuclear standoff with Pyongyang will be a "slow process." Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly spoke the day after talks with North Korea's staunchest ally, China
- NORTH KOREA ARMS VOA 16 Jan 2003-- While diplomats around the world worry about the prospect of North Korea building nuclear arms, some analysts say the biggest immediate danger from the Stalinist state is its conventional weapons. While few analysts think fighting will break out on the Korean Peninsula any time soon, a conflict would be devastating
- WORLD BANK / NORKOR VOA 16 Jan 2003-- World Bank President James Wolfensohn says North Korea urgently requires humanitarian aid
- KIM JONG IL PROFILE VOA 16 Jan 2003-- As governments across the globe try to defuse a nuclear crisis with communist North Korea, Kim Jong Il, the man who runs the country, remains something of a mystery
- U.S. Finds Asian Consensus for Nuclear-Free Korean Peninsula Washington File 16 Jan 2003-- State Department spokesman Richard Boucher told reporters at a January
16 briefing that all parties in the Asia-Pacific region agree on one
thing -- the Korean peninsula must be free of nuclear weapons.
- DPRK NUCLEAR PROGRAM: U.S. WILLINGNESS TO TALK A 'STEP FORWARD' Foreign Media Reactions 16 Jan 2003-- Most praised the U.S. decision to seek "direct bilateral negotiations" with the North / Pyongyang's use of "nuclear blackmail" could prompt global "nuclear rearmament" / Many term North Korean threat "considerably more concrete and tangible" than Iraq's / Leftist, Muslim observers blast U.S.' "confusing signals" and "unilateral decisions"
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