BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, Brunei — US Secretary of State John Kerry stepped up pressure Monday on North Korea to give up its atomic weapons program, saying key regional powers, including North Korean ally China, are all “absolutely united” in demanding nuclear disarmament.
Kerry made the comments on the eve of Asia’s largest annual security conference, the 27-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum, which includes top diplomats from the United States, North Korea and four other nations involved in long-dormant nuclear disarmament talks.
North Korea’s nuclear ambitions are expected to dominate the security forum along with other issues such as South China Sea territorial disputes.
Tension on the Korean Peninsula spiked earlier this year after North Korea conducted its third nuclear test and issued a torrent of threats to attack the United States and South Korea in anger over toughened UN sanctions over the underground atomic blast. North Korea recently ratcheted down the rhetoric and offered to talk with its rivals but has repeatedly vowed to expand its nuclear arsenal in response to what it calls US hostility.
China, North Korea’s longstanding ally and main aid provider, has shown signs of frustration with its neighbor by supporting UN sanctions and cracking down on North Korean banking activity.
After meeting with his counterparts from China, South Korea and Japan, Kerry told reporters Monday that “I want to emphasize … all four of us are absolutely united and absolutely firm in our insistence that the future with respect to North Korea must include denuclearization.
“China made clear to me they have made very firm statements and very firm steps that they have taken with respect to the implementation of that policy,” he said.
“We confirmed that there is a better path open to North Korea,” Kerry said. He said North Korea would have a chance to have normal relations with other nations if it undertakes “a serious set of steps to denuclearize and serious negotiations that could accompany that.”
Earlier Monday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said the six-nation disarmament talks need to be resumed to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue.
“We hope the relevant parties can work together toward the goal and bring the denuclearization back to the track of dialogues,” Wang told reporters after private talks with his North Korean counterpart, Pak Ui Chun.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also expressed his opposition to North Korea possessing nuclear weapons when he met his South Korean counterpart Yun Byung-se on Monday, Yun’s office said in a statement.
The nuclear disarmament talks—which involve the two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia—have been stalled since North Korea pulled out of the negotiations in 2009 to protest international condemnation over a rocket launch.
Since the Asean security forum includes all six countries involved in the nuclear talks, it has previously provided a chance to use informal discussions to break stalemates over the nuclear standoff. In 2011, top nuclear envoys from the two Koreas met on the sidelines of the forum in Bali, Indonesia, and agreed to work toward a resumption of the six-nation talks.
It’s still unclear whether such talks will take place in Brunei. South Korean and US officials said they have no immediate plans to meet privately with North Korea.
The North has expressed its intention to rejoin the nuclear talks, but the United States and South Korea say North Korea first must demonstrate its sincerity on nuclear disarmament with concrete action.
Meeting top Asean diplomats, Kerry also said Washington wants to see immediate progress on a proposed “code of conduct” between China and the 10-nation bloc to ensure regional stability amid long-raging territorial disputes in the South China Sea, which has some of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. The proposed pact aims to discourage aggressive acts that could set off armed confrontations.
Saying America does not take sides in the disputes, Kerry reiterated that the United States has a strong interest in the way the disputes are to be resolved “and in the conduct of the parties.” Aside from China and Taiwan, four Aseanmembers—Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam—have long contested ownership of the resource-rich islands, islets, reefs and surrounding waters.
“As a Pacific nation, and the resident power, the United States has a national interest in the maintenance of peace and stability, respect for international law, unimpeded lawful commerce and freedom of navigation in the South China Sea,” Kerry said. “What happens here matters to the United States.”
Aiming to reassure allies, Kerry said the Obama administration would intensify its strategic “pivot” to Asia, including its political and security engagement with Southeast Asia.
“Let me be crystal clear: I know that some people have wondered whether in the second term of the Obama administration and with a new secretary of state, are we going to continue on the path that we have been on? And the answer, I say to all of you directly, is yes,” he said. “Not just yes, but we hope to increase the effort.”
Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann in Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei, and Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines, contributed to this report.