By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)--President Bush and newly elected South
Korean President Roh Moo-hyun agreed Wednesday that the Korean
Peninsula should be nuclear-weapons free and that the current
standoff with North Korea should be resolved through peaceful
means.
``We're making good progress toward achieving that peaceful
resolution ... in regard to North Korea,'' Bush said in a Rose
Garden statement with Roh by his side.
Roh, who in the past has urged the United States against
slapping economic sanctions on the North or considering
military force, said that he came to his meeting with Bush
with ``both concerns and hopes in my mind,'' but that Bush had
dispelled the concerns.
``Now I return to Korea with only hopes in my mind,'' Roh
said.
The two presidents issued a joint statement asserting that
their countries ``will not tolerate'' nuclear weapons in North
Korea and invited other nations in the region and Russia to
help defuse the current nuclear standoff. The leaders stated
their confidence that peaceful resolution is possible ``while
noting that increased threats to peace and stability on the
peninsula would require consideration of further steps.''
``Escalatory moves by North Korea will only lead to its
greater isolation and a more desperate situation in the
North,'' their statement said.
The ``further steps'' mentioned in the joint statement
could mean military action as well as ``a lot of things in the
toolbox,'' said a senior administration official who briefed
reporters after the meeting on condition of anonymity. The
South Koreans, who have wary of more aggressive action toward
North Korea, accepted that vaguely worded reference because
Bush and Roh also agreed that diplomacy and increasing
isolation of North Korea are the preferred tactics, the
official said.
It was the first time the two leaders had met face to face,
after four previous phone conversations. Their time together
included a private tour for Roh of the White House with an
emphasis on Abraham Lincoln, one of the South Korean leaders'
favorite historical figures, the official said.
Bush said he found Roh ``to be an easy man to talk to. He
expresses his opinions clearly and he's easy to understand.''
The two leaders spoke briefly from the Rose Garden, which
was bright with late-day sunlight, then turned without taking
questions to the residence portion of the White House for
dinner.
Earlier, Roh appealed to the United States not to rush to a
decision to reposition the 36,000 U.S. troops now stationed in
South Korea. His office said in a statement that Vice
President Dick Cheney told Roh over lunch that ``U.S. troops
should stay in South Korea because they guarantee security in
the region.''
U.S. officials did not dispute the account.
Years ago, Roh demanded that U.S. troops leave but now he
is seeking to delay U.S. proposals to move troops away from
the Demilitarized Zone, which separates the two Koreas.
Roh told Cheney, ``I understand the principle and necessity
of relocation of American forces in South Korea.'' But, he
added, such a ``realignment of U.S. forces affects Korean
politics and the economy,'' according to the South Korean
statement.
``There has to be close coordination between the U.S. and
South Korea on this subject,'' Roh was quoted as saying.
On the North Korean nuclear standoff, Bush and Roh both
emphasized a diplomatic solution.
In their joint statement, the two leaders welcomed China's
role in hosting a three-way meeting last month that included
the North and the United States. The statement also suggested
that subsequent talks should also include South Korea and
Japan and that ``Russia and other nations can also play a
constructive role.''
Participation of all these nations is ``essential for a
successful and comprehensive settlement,'' the statement said.
However, the leaders did not set a time frame for more
talks, preferring to make sure first that all the regional
players are on board with the same, strong message, the
official said.
White House officials said ahead of the meeting that the
United States would not rule out force as an option to keep
Pyongyang from pursuing its nuclear ambitions.
``The president never takes his options off the table in
any circumstance,'' Bush's national security adviser,
Condoleezza Rice, told reporters.
``No one should be willing to give in to the kind of
blackmail that the North Koreans have been practicing on the
world for a number of years now,'' she added.
Roh favors more engagement with North Korea, but the Bush
administration is wary of negotiating with North Korean leader
Kim Jong Il. Top Bush advisers are divided on whether to
pursue a policy of containment or increased dialogue.
At talks in Beijing last month, North Korea said it would
give up its nuclear and missile programs in exchange for
economic aid and security guarantees.
The Beijing talks were the first since the crisis erupted
last October, when Washington said North Korea had
acknowledged running a secret nuclear weapons program in
violation of a 1994 treaty with the United States.
North Korea subsequently withdrew from the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty and took steps to restart nuclear
facilities frozen under the pact.
AP-NY-05-14-03 2130EDT
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