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BEIJING -- A top North Korean envoy delivered a letter
from leader Kim Jong Un to Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday and
told him Pyongyang would take steps to rejoin stalled six-nation nuclear
disarmament talks, in an apparent victory for Beijing's efforts to coax
its unruly ally into lowering tensions.
North
Korean Vice Marshal Choe Ryong Hae's visit was part of efforts to mend
fences after Pyongyang angered Beijing with recent snubs and moves to
develop its nuclear program.
The official
China News Service said Choe delivered the handwritten letter from Kim
to Xi at an afternoon meeting at the Great Hall of the People in central
Beijing. It gave no details about the letter's contents.
North
Korea is willing to work with all sides to "appropriately resolve the
relevant questions through the six-party talks and other forms," Choe
was quoted as saying by Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.
He said Pyongyang was "willing to take active measures in this regard."
Choe
offered no details on how North Korea planned to resume talks. North
Korea has reneged on commitments made in previous rounds of the
six-party talks, stalemated since 2009 over disagreements on how to
verify steps the North was taking to end its nuclear programs.
China has been under intense pressure from Washington to push North Korea into lowering tensions and resuming dialogue.
Xi reaffirmed longstanding ties between the communist neighbors, and urged all sides to "keep cool and exercise restraint."
The
six-party talks should aim to end North Korea's nuclear programs and
"maintain lasting peace and stability on the peninsula and in northeast
Asia," Xi was quoted as saying.
The meeting
followed an unusual half-year gap in high-level contacts during which
Pyongyang angered Beijing by conducting rocket launches, a nuclear test
and other saber-rattling - spiking tensions with South Korea and the
U.S.
Beijing considered the moves an affront
to its interests in regional stability and showed its displeasure by
joining with the U.S. to back U.N. sanctions and cut off dealings with
North Korea's Foreign Trade Bank.
North Korea
also frustrated Beijing by refusing to agree to high-level meetings and
incensed the Chinese public this month with the detention of a Chinese
fishing crew.
"The relationship is rocky, so
they will try to mend the relationship," Cui Yingjiu, a retired
professor of Korean at Peking University, said of North Korea. "Second,
they also want to improve relations with the U.S. and need China to be
their intermediary."
North Korea has figured
prominently in recent visits by Secretary of State John Kerry and other
U.S. officials, and Choe's three-day visit to Beijing came ahead of a
meeting in California early next month between Xi and President Barack
Obama, as well as a trip to Beijing by South Korean President Park
Geun-hye in late June.
China is North Korea's
last significant diplomatic ally and main source of trade and economic
assistance. Ties between their insular communist governments have always
been wrapped in secrecy and it is not clear whether the contents of
Kim's letter to Xi will ever be revealed.
China
is believed to have agreed to Choe's visit only after Pyongyang
committed to returning to the process of negotiation, and required him
to state that publicly twice before his meeting with Xi.
Earlier
Friday, a top Chinese general told Choe that Beijing wanted a peaceful,
denuclearized Korean Peninsula, in a reiteration of China's established
position that could also be seen as a rebuke to the North.
The
official state Xinhua News Agency quoted Fan Changlong as telling Choe
that tensions surrounding the nuclear issue have "intensified strategic
conflicts among involved parties and jeopardized the peace and stability
of the peninsula."
Xinhua quoted Choe as
telling Fan that there is "no guarantee of peace" but his country was
"willing to work with all sides to search for a method of solving the
problems through dialogue," Choe said.
On
Thursday, Choe told the ruling party's fifth-ranked official that North
Korea "is willing to accept the suggestion of the Chinese side and
launch dialogue with all relevant parties."
John
Delury, a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul who specializes in
China and North Korea, said the fact that Kim's envoy "is being quoted
as saying that North Korea is open to China's suggestions already is a
strong signal of kiss and make up."
"This trip is moving things back to a regular strategic dialogue," he said.
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