Talks in Korea lead toward missile restraint
PYONGYANG, North Korea North Korea has accepted the idea of working
toward restraint in its missile program, U.S. officials said yesterday,
citing progress on a critical issue dividing the two countries as they
explore reconciliation after 50 years.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright ended her historic talks with
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il struck by the improbability of it all
a cordial visit to a Stalinist land that the United States, until
recently, called a rogue state.
But both sides knew they had a long way to go to bury enmity arising
from the Korean War and the vast differences between the open democracy
and the closed communist regime.
"The glasses I have on are not rose colored," Albright said.
Kim, commenting before their final meeting yesterday, said: "I don't
think the three hours of discussions we had yesterday were enough to break
the silence of 50 years."
Albright told reporters she took seriously a remark by Kim
delivered seemingly offhand at a gymnastic exhibition that his
state would refrain from long-range missile launches.
A State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said after Albright and Kim finished their talks that the North Korean
leader has accepted the idea of "serious restraint" in missiles.
Albright was going to Seoul, South Korea, today to tell South Korean
and Japanese officials about her talks with Kim. President Clinton is
considering whether to visit North Korea himself, a trip that could come
next month.
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