The US said Monday that it had accepted a two-week postponement
of the six-party talks, and that it was ready to come back to the
negotiating table on the week of September 12.
"We are prepared to go back the week of September 12 and we are
ready," State Department spokesperson Sean McCormack said at a news
briefing.
McCormack made the remarks after North Korea called for
resumption of the six-party talks on the week of September 12.
North Korean Foreign Ministry said Monday that it could not
attend the nuclear talks while US-South Korean military drills were
in progress. The exercises, which began last week, will end
Friday.
About 10,000 American and an undisclosed number of South Korean
troops are participating in this year's exercise.
Delegates to the fourth round of six-party talks aimed at
persuading Pyongyang to give up nuclear development took a recess
earlier this month and had agreed to meet again this week.
The first phase of the fourth-round six-party talks, involving
the US, China, Japan, Russia, North and South Korea, failed to
agree on a statement of basic principles to guide future
negotiations.
"We're prepared to engage in six-party talks in a constructive
manner," McCormack said.
"We hope that all the other parties, including North Korea, come
back to the table and resume the business-like atmosphere they
demonstrated during the most recent session of the talks."
(Xinhua News Agency August 30, 2005)