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China To Aid N. Korea Nuke Talks

China is sending a top communist party official to North Korea this week, the government said Thursday, amid renewed efforts to get Beijing's longtime ally to resume stalled talks on its nuclear weapons program.

Top negotiators from the United States and South Korea were in Beijing seeking China's help on persuading the isolated North to return to multination nuclear talks that were suspended in June.

South Korean officials, speaking in Seoul, said they believed China, the North's biggest backer and a major source of aid to the impoverished country, could do more to win over Pyongyang.

"I think China has a much bigger card to play than we expect. The question is whether it will play it," South Korea's ambassador to China, Kim Ha-joong, said at a news conference Thursday in Seoul.

North Korea has rejected calls to return to the talks, accusing Washington of hostility. Last week, it claimed it has produced nuclear weapons.

Wary of openly testing its influence with the North, China has urged patience, while saying it strongly favors a nuclear-free Korean peninsula.

"We are of the view that we should not resort to sanctions or pressure in international relations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said at a regular briefing.

Such tactics "will not solve problems, but instead escalate tensions," he said.

Although Chinese troops fought to defend North Korea in the 1950-53 Korean War, Beijing worries that a nuclear-armed North Korea would raise tensions in the region and prompt Japan and South Korea to also develop nuclear weapons.

Quan confirmed that Wang Jiarui, head of the Communist Party's international department, would visit Pyongyang this week. Quan would not provide dates.

While working to resolve the standoff, "the Chinese side requires that the DPRK side and United States show more flexibility and sincerity," Kong said, using the acronym for the North's formal name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Christopher Hill, the new U.S. negotiator assigned to trying to dismantle the North's nuclear program, participated in a day of talks Thursday.

"Very good meetings," Hill said. "I'm not going into specifics. It was a very good, introductory talk."

Hill, who is also U.S. ambassador to South Korea, is just beginning to make the rounds after being appointed head of the American delegation to the North Korea talks on Monday.

Washington views North Korea as a formidable threat even without a nuclear capability.

The North continues to "develop, produce, deploy and sell ballistic missiles of increasing range and sophistication," CIA director Porter Goss told a U.S. Senate Committee on Wednesday.

Goss said Pyongyang could resume missile tests at any time, despite a 1999 agreement with the United States not to conduct such tests. CIA analysts also believe the North plans to build a uranium-based nuclear bomb in addition to plutonium-based weapons and chemical and biological weapons programs.

South Korea's deputy foreign minister, Song Min-soon, also traveled to Beijing for talks with his Chinese counterparts.

"I came to China to reopen the six-nation talks as soon as possible and thus settle the nuclear issue smoothly," Song said.

Speaking in Seoul, South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon said China has told his government it plans to take "other initiatives" apart from sending Wang to Pyongyang.

Ban did not elaborate. But Kim, the South Korean ambassador to Beijing, noted Beijing's role as the North's main supplier of fuel, aid and other imports.

"There are currently a few railways and 15 unofficial roads connecting North Korea and China," Kim said. "Imagine what kind of situation will arise in North Korea if China decides one day to close three of those roads for repair for a couple of months."

China is believed to supply Pyongyang with up to one-third of its food and one-quarter of its energy. The North has depended on foreign aid to feed its people since the collapse of its government farm system in the mid-1990s and the loss of Soviet subsidies.

But Beijing insists it has little influence over the isolated Stalinist regime of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.

"China will be concerned about whether playing that card will hurt their 55 years of amicable relationship with the North," Kim acknowledged.

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