The United States rejected yesterday the idea of holding direct talks with
the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) and insisted that the two can
have talks within the framework of six-party talks.
"Within the context of the six-party talks, we are
absolutely willing to talk to the North Koreans," State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said at a briefing.
"But the idea that you deal with North Korea in a strictly bilateral sense is
one that's been tried and unfortunately has failed. And we are now in a position
where North Korea, when it persists in bad behavior in the vein of launching
missiles, conducting a nuclear test, it's not a U.S.- North Korea issue,"
McCormack said.
"This is now an issue where you have the Security Council and the other five
parties of the six-party talks united in putting pressure on North Korea to get
them to change their behavior," McCormack said.
The six-party talks, which involve the United States, the DPRK, China,
Russia, South Korea and Japan, have been stalled since September last year when
the last round of talks were held in Beijing.
The United States has urged the DPRK to return to the six-party talks
although it has conducted a nuclear test.