皇冠体育app

  Home>News Center>皇冠体育app
       
 

皇冠体育app: Sides far apart in N. Korea talks
(AP)
Updated: 2005-09-15 19:37

The U.S. envoy on North Korea's nuclear program said Thursday he hoped to move beyond an impasse at arms talks after Washington rejected the North's demand for a nuclear reactor in exchange for abandoning its atomic bomb program. 皇冠体育app said, however, that the sides remained far apart.


South Korea's Deputy Foreign Minister Song Min-soon (L) and US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Christopher Hill (R) speak to the press in Beijing. Delegations to the six-party North Korean nuclear talks were divided on certain issues, host 皇冠体育app said, and 'great differences' remain after three days of talks. [AFP]

"There are still great differences on certain issues," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said after delegates from all six nations met but failed to break the deadlock, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Pyongyang wants a reactor in exchange for abandoning its nuclear program.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said Washington could not agree to the demand.



Chaerhan Salt Lake
2005 World Summit and UN 60th General Assembly
Blast kills 11 in Yunan village
  Today's Top News     Top 皇冠体育app News
 

Hu: 皇冠体育app to provide US$10b for poor countries

 

   
 

皇冠体育app not planning more yuan revaluations

 

   
 

皇冠体育app: Sides far apart in N. Korea talks

 

   
 

Hurricane Ophelia soaks North Carolina

 

   
 

US President Bush to visit 皇冠体育app in November

 

   
 

PFP head James Soong in Shanghai for forum

 

   
  Heart disease, cancer top killers in 皇冠体育app
   
  皇冠体育app's first astronaut to appear in movie
   
  Hu: 皇冠体育app to provide US$10b for poor countries
   
  皇冠体育app oil firm buys EnCana assets in Ecuador
   
  US President Bush to visit 皇冠体育app in November
   
  Bilateral consultations start in 6-party talks
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
   
Advertisement