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US backs North Korea's neighbours | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
US President Barack Obama has spoken to the leaders of Japan and South Korea to assure them of US defence support after North Korea's nuclear test. | US President Barack Obama has spoken to the leaders of Japan and South Korea to assure them of US defence support after North Korea's nuclear test. |
Late on Monday the UN Security Council strongly condemned Pyongyang. Diplomats have begun drafting a resolution to punish the communist state. | |
But North Korea appeared unbowed; South Korea said its northern neighbour could be preparing more missile tests. | |
North Korea announced it had carried out a nuclear test early on Monday. | |
In a strongly-worded statement carried by the state news agency on Tuesday, it said it was prepared to fight. | |
"It is clear that nothing has changed in the US hostile policy against DPRK [North Korea]... even under the new US administration," it said in an article criticising recent US moves to relocate its fighter jets. name="goback"> class="bodl" href="#map"> See map of test site | |
"Our army and people are fully ready for battle... against any reckless US attempt for a pre-emptive attack," it said. | |
Coordinated defence | Coordinated defence |
Mr Obama spoke by phone late on Monday with his South Korean counterpart Lee Myung-bak and Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso to "coordinate" reaction to North Korea's nuclear test. | Mr Obama spoke by phone late on Monday with his South Korean counterpart Lee Myung-bak and Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso to "coordinate" reaction to North Korea's nuclear test. |
The White House said they agreed to work towards "a strong United Nations Security Council resolution with concrete measures to curtail North Korea's nuclear and missile activities". | |
NUCLEAR CRISIS Oct 2006 - North Korea conducts an underground nuclear testFeb 2007 - North Korea agrees to close its main nuclear reactor in exchange for fuel aidJune 2007 - North Korea shuts its main Yongbyon reactorJune 2008 - North Korea makes its long-awaited declaration of nuclear assetsOct 2008 - The US removes North Korea from its list of countries which sponsor terrorismDec 2008 - Pyongyang slows work to dismantle its nuclear programme after a US decision to suspend energy aidJan 2009 - The North says it is scrapping all military and political deals with the South, accusing it of "hostile intent"April 2009 - Pyongyang launches a rocket carrying what it says is a communications satellite25 May 2009 - North Korea conducts a second nuclear test class="" href="/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2340405.stm">Q&A: North Korea nuclear test class="" href="/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/8067368.stm">Korean test rocks region class="" href="/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7985336.stm">N Korea a problem for Obama | |
In his talks with Mr Aso, Mr Obama reiterated his country's "unequivocal commitment to the defence of Japan and to maintaining peace and security in Northeast Asia". | |
South Korean and Chinese defence ministers are set to discuss joint action, South Korean media reported. | |
The discussions followed an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in New York, where members voiced strong opposition to the test and condemned it. | |
The US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, said America wanted "strong measures" when it starts work on the resolution. | |
"The US thinks that this is a grave violation of international law and a threat to regional and international peace and security," she said. | "The US thinks that this is a grave violation of international law and a threat to regional and international peace and security," she said. |
Russia's UN envoy told reporters the nuclear test was a clear violation of UN Resolution 1718. That resolution imposed sanctions on North Korea after its first test. | Russia's UN envoy told reporters the nuclear test was a clear violation of UN Resolution 1718. That resolution imposed sanctions on North Korea after its first test. |
The UK's Ambassador to the UN, Sir John Sawers, explained that the Council had decided to act in two stages, first issuing a statement "strongly condemning and opposing what the North Koreans have done by carrying out this second nuclear test". | The UK's Ambassador to the UN, Sir John Sawers, explained that the Council had decided to act in two stages, first issuing a statement "strongly condemning and opposing what the North Koreans have done by carrying out this second nuclear test". |
"And we decided to start work immediately on a further Security Council resolution in order to uphold the international peace and security in the region," he added. | "And we decided to start work immediately on a further Security Council resolution in order to uphold the international peace and security in the region," he added. |
More missile tests? | |
But there was no sign that the criticism would influence North Korea. | |
US President Barack Obama says North Korea's activities pose a "grave threat" | |
South Korean military sources have warned of signs that the North may be preparing to fire anti-ship missiles off its west coast. A number of missile tests accompanied Monday's nuclear test. | |
The government in Seoul has announced it will delay no longer in joining the PSI - a US-led non-proliferation campaign aimed at stopping the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction. | |
North Korea has repeatedly warned that the South's participation in the PSI would be tantamount to a declaration of war. | |
The heightened fears of conflict follow weeks of warnings from North Korea that it would strengthen its "deterrent", and came after the communist state walked away from long-running negotiations on its nuclear programme amid deadlock with the US. | |
The international community faces a difficult task, confronting what many view as a dangerously unpredictable regime, BBC world affairs correspondent David Loyn reports. | The international community faces a difficult task, confronting what many view as a dangerously unpredictable regime, BBC world affairs correspondent David Loyn reports. |
Monday's blast, which was estimated by international seismologists to have the power of a 4.5 magnitude earthquake, appears to have been much more powerful than North Korea's first nuclear test, in October 2006. | |
Defence officials in neighbouring Russia say it was an explosion of up to 20 kilotons, making it comparable to the American bombs that flattened Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. | |
NORTH KOREA'S SUSPECTED NUCLEAR TEST SITE Nuclear test on 25 May 2009 is thought to have been carried out at same site as October 2006 test | NORTH KOREA'S SUSPECTED NUCLEAR TEST SITE Nuclear test on 25 May 2009 is thought to have been carried out at same site as October 2006 test |
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