US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and visiting South Korean
Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon discussed the six-party talks on the
Korean Peninsula nuclear issue Tuesday evening, the State
Department said in a statement.
"They discussed regional issues, including the six-party talks.
Both agreed that progress had been made during this round of talks,
that they had seen a businesslike approach to the talks from the
North Korean delegation, and that they looked forward to resumption
of the talks," the statement said.
They also discussed the diplomatic way prior to and after the
resumption of talks, the statement said, adding that Ban also
updated Rice on the state of issues related to the inter-Korean
dialogue.
Moreover, they also discussed preparations for the upcoming
informal leaders' meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) forum, which South Korea will host in November, the
statement added.
The fourth round of six-party talks, which lasted for 13 days in
Beijing, is now in recess. All parties have agreed to resume the
talks next week.
South Korea has said that the North has the right to a peaceful
nuclear program, a view in apparent conflict with the US. However,
both Washington and Seoul have tried to play down any conflict
between the two allies.
(Xinhua News Agency August 24, 2005)