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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    5:26am, EDT

    Analysis: North Korea blinked in missile standoff, but will threaten again

    By Jim Maceda, Correspondent, NBC News

    News analysis

    SEOUL, South Korea – After weeks of a standoff that, at times, worried even the most stoic South Koreans, the North blinked. The latest North Korea crisis is over, but the question is: for how long? 

    The view doesn’t look encouraging. North Korea’s medium-range missiles remain locked on their launchers; U.S. and South Korean destroyers still ply Korea’s coastline. 

    Across the region, Patriot anti-missile batteries are on the ready. One top U.S. nuclear expert says North Korea will need to test-fire more missiles and nuclear arms in the future. 

    But at least for now, instead of drumbeats of war, Pyongyang is sending out feelers about talks and piling on its demands: The complete lifting of United Nations' sanctions, a permanent end to U.S.-South Korean war games, and lots of apologies. The latest came on Tuesday with the North insisting it must be recognized as a nuclear weapons state, rejecting a U.S. condition that it agree to give up its nuclear arms program before talks can begin.

    The South called the North's conditions “shameless.”

    Secretary of State John Kerry has taken a broader view, saying it’s “at least a beginning gambit.”

    But he’s already dismissing talks until North Korea shows serious signs of dismantling its nuclear arms program. In response, Kim Jong Un’s regime has said that’s a non-starter – that its nuclear weapons are its “treasured sword” and aren’t negotiable at any price.

    Secretary of State John Kerry opened the door to direct disarmament talks with North Korea, but there is still no sign Kim Jong Un is prepared to stop testing nuclear weapons. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    We’ve been here before. The Obama administration calls it “a cycle of provocation.” North Korea deploys threatening words and actions – capped off with a real missile or nuclear test – in order to gain concessions from the U.S. and South Korea, usually in the form of cash. The North then retreats -- until the next crisis.

    Some Korea experts say Washington has failed to break that cycle, despite its efforts at “strategic patience” – a highfalutin expression for avoiding engagement with the North while letting sanctions bite.

    And they blame that U.S. policy as much as North Korea for the impasse.

    “The problem is that, when there’s a sense of crisis, the U.S. doesn’t want to talk to Pyongyang because it would be rewarding bad behavior,” said John Delury, a professor at Seoul’s Yonsei University. “But then when the crisis abates, the U.S. doesn’t want to talk with Pyongyang [either] because it’s not a priority."

    Analysts like Delury say it’s only a matter of time before tensions, once again, will rise to dangerous levels. That’s because the U.S. keeps learning the wrong lessons, so it’s stuck in a low-grade, perpetual crisis with North Korea.

    They say the U.S. has failed to see that North Korea is really after security first and foremost, followed by recognition and international legitimacy, not aid. If they were just after money, Pyongyang would not have shut down its Keasong Industrial Park, a joint North-South venture which generates billions of dollars annually in trade, during the latest crisis.

    North Korea’s provocations are often seen in the West as a kind of pro-active blackmail, but Delury said that’s another U.S. misperception.

    “North Korea is reactive,” he explained. “Half of its provocations are counter or defensive moves to assert its strength in the face of far more powerful U.S., South Korean and Japanese forces arrayed against them.”

    It’s true that, during the most recent crisis, the tide turned away from confrontation only when the U.S. dialed down its displays of nuclear-capable weaponry, like B2 stealth bombers and F-22 super fighters, used as a show of force during war maneuvers close to North Korea’s border.

    Much, of course, depends on the extent to which China – North Korea’s main benefactor with a hand on the tiny country’s food and fuel taps – can persuade Kim that he can rule without the need for nuclear weapons as his ultimate guarantee. 

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    But the U.S. -- Korea watchers here say -- needs to grasp that North Korea’s goal is to survive in a tough neighborhood, surrounded by nuclear powers – China, Russia and U.S. forces. 

    If the U.S. wants to break its perpetual cycle of crisis with North Korea, it may well have to bite the bullet – these analysts say – and sit down and negotiate with a “nuclear North Korea,” without officially recognizing the state, or its atomic capability. 

    Rather than cash handouts, that could open the door to serious discussions about North Korea’s economic development – something that Kim himself recently called a top priority. Getting there, though, is fraught with difficulty – it would require massive amounts of political will and constant communication through a high-level U.S. special envoy to North Korea, someone like George Mitchell or Madeleine Albright.

    It would also mean a leap of faith by the young Kim – if indeed he is in control of his country, as U.S. officials now believe - and the unlearning of wrong lessons by the U.S.

    But the alternative, says Delury, is much worse – more bristling standoffs in the future, with even more risk that an accident or miscalculation could trigger a disaster. “Both sides have gone from trading statements about who is really ready for war, to trading statements about who is really ready for dialogue. But that doesn’t mean anything has really changed at a fundamental level.”

    And, unless it does, sooner or later North Korea will be back on the airwaves, threatening the world with its “sledge-hammer blows.”

    Jim Maceda is an NBC News foreign correspondent based in London, currently on assignment in Seoul, South Korea.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    US, North Korea appear far apart on conditions for negotiation

    Kerry: China must do more to resolve N. Korea crisis 

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

     

     

     

     

    205 comments

    They are waiting for us to cave. Our allies and enemies seem to think that we should just dole out money and recognition to them and kiss their ass so there can be peace periodically as we kick the can down the road. I say keep them on ignore. If they want to get froggy, let them jump.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: north-korea, u-s, south-korea, seoul, featured, pyongyang, kim-jong-un
  • 18
    Apr
    2013
    12:30pm, EDT

    US, North Korea appear far apart on conditions for negotiation

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A White House spokesman said Thursday that the United States was open to "authentic and credible" discussions with North Korea -- if it were to show a willingness to abandon its nuclear ambitions. But early signals from Pyongyang were less than enthusiastic.

    Aboard Air Force One as President Barack Obama was headed to Boston, spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters that U.S. officials would be willing to negotiate, but would "need to see clear evidence" that the North was "willing to live up to international obligations."

    "So far we have not seen that," he added. "Belligerent actions ... actually indicate the opposite of that."

    North Korea's response through its state media agency KCNA seemed unlikely to change that perception.

    A statement attributed to the policy department of North Korea's National Defense Commission laid down tough conditions under which the North might consider coming to the bargaining table.

    Among the North's demands were that the U.S. work to reverse sanctions imposed by the United Nations Security Council over Pyongyang's continued nuclear tests. "They should bear in mind that doing so would be a token of good will towards the DPRK," or Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the statement said.

    Less easy to define was a demand that the U.S. "stop all provocative acts against the DPRK and apologize for all of them."

    The statement appeared to refer to the Key Resolve and Foal Eagle joint military exercises conducted by U.S. and South Korean forces when it demanded that the U.S. "give formal assurances before the world that they would not stage again such nuclear war drills to threaten or blackmail the DPRK."

    It additionally demanded that U.S. immediately "withdraw all nuclear war means from South Korea and its vicinity and give up their attempt to reintroduce them."

    "They should bear in mind that the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula can begin with the pullout of the nuclear war means introduced by the U.S. and this may lead to the global denuclearization," the statement said.

    NBC News' Stacey Klein contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Kerry: China must do more to resolve N. Korea crisis

    Kerry says US ready to 'reach out' to North Korea

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    59 comments

    Dear Fatboy Kim, Please put your temper tantrum on hold.

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    Explore related topics: washington, nuclear, north-korea, u-s, tensions, negotiations, pyongyang
  • 16
    Apr
    2013
    6:20pm, EDT

    North Korea vows 'sledge-hammer blows' of retaliation over protests in South

    Jeon Heon-Kyun/AP

    An effigy of North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un, left, and his father, former leader Kim Jong-Il, before being burned, during a rally against North Korea, in Seoul on April 15.

    By Robert Birsel and Jack Kim, Reuters

    North Korea issued new threats against South Korea on Tuesday, vowing "sledge-hammer blows" of retaliation if South Korea did not apologize for anti-North Korean protests the previous day when the North was celebrating the birth of its founding leader.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The North also rejected what it called "cunning" U.S. overtures for talks, saying it will not be humiliated into being dragged to sit at the negotiating table by Washington.

    But a senior U.S. military official in South Korea said the North Korean leadership was looking for a way to cool down its rhetoric after weeks of warnings of war.

    On Monday, the North dropped its shrill threats against the United States and South Korea as it celebrated the 101st anniversary of the birth of its first leader, Kim Il-Sung, raising hopes for an easing of tension in a region that has for weeks seemed on the verge of conflict.


    But the North's KCNA news agency said on Tuesday the North Korean army had issued an ultimatum to the South after rallies in the South on Monday at which portraits of North Korea's leaders were burned.

    "Our retaliatory action will start without any notice from now," KCNA reported, citing military leaders of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), as North Korea is officially known.

    The North's Foreign Ministry also rejected what it said was cunning U.S. scheming aimed at defusing tensions on the Korean peninsula with an offer of talks while deploying military assets capable of launching nuclear strikes against it.

    "We do not oppose dialogue but we will not sit down at talks table in humiliation against opponents who are swinging the nuclear club against us," an unnamed Foreign Ministry spokesman said in comments carried by the KCNA news agency.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in Seoul last week that Washington was open to dialogue with Pyongyang on the condition that the talks would lead to eliminating nuclear arsenal from the North.

    South Korean media reported several small demonstrations in the capital, Seoul, on Monday. One television station showed pictures of a handful of protesters burning a portrait of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    Small counter-protests, by South Koreans calling for dialogue with the North, were also held, media reported.

    The North has threatened nuclear attacks on the United States, South Korea and Japan after new U.N. sanctions were imposed in response to its latest nuclear arms test in February.

    The North has also been angry about annual military exercises between U.S. and South Korean forces, describing them as a "hostile" act. The United States dispatched B52 and B2 stealth bombers from their bases to take part.

    Offer of talks
    But along with the new threat on Tuesday, the North's KCNA raised the possibility of dialogue.

    "If the puppet authorities truly want dialogue and negotiations, they should apologize for all anti-DPRK hostile acts, big and small, and show the compatriots their will to stop all these acts," KCNA cited the North's military as saying.

    A South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman later told a briefing the North Korean ultimatum was not worth a response and South Korea was waiting for the North to make a "wise decision".

    Last week, the South's President Park Geun-hye offered talks but the North rejected the overture as a "cunning" ploy.

    Park will meet U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House on May 7 to discuss economic and security issues, including "countering the North Korean threat", the White House said on Monday.

    The U.S. military official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said a North Korean missile test or nuclear test were possible but he believed it was trying to tone down its the war of words.

    "The DPRK leadership is trying to figure out a way to off-ramp from the heightened state of rhetoric that we've been seeing for the past several weeks," the official told reporters.

    North Korea faced difficulties trying to "fix and tune up" its Soviet-era conventional weapons, and that was why it wanted nuclear weapons, and the missiles to deliver them.

    "They are replacing that decreasing conventional capability with increasing asymmetric capability of weapons of mass destruction, intercontinental ballistic missiles and special operations forces," the official said.

    The United States has offered talks with the North, but on the pre-condition that it abandons its nuclear weapons ambitions. North Korea deems its nuclear arms a "treasured sword" and has vowed never to give them up.

    However, U.S. Secretary of State Kerry, ending his visit to Korea, appeared to open the door to talking without requiring the North to take denuclearization steps in advance. Beijing, he said, could be an intermediary.

    North Korea has conducted three nuclear tests but it was not believed to be near weapons capability.

    Missile launches and nuclear tests by North Korea are both banned under U.N. Security Council resolutions that were expanded after the North's February test.

    The aim of the North's aggression, analysts say, is to bolster the leadership of Kim Jong Un, the 30-year-old grandson Kim Il-Sung, or to force the United States, which has 28,000 troops in South Korea, to open talks.

    A U.S. Marine transport helicopter crashed in South Korea on Tuesday, near the border with North Korea, with 21 people on board during exercises with South Korean forces.

    The U.S. military described the accident as a "hard landing" and said six people were in stable condition in hospital. South Korean media said the helicopter caught fire after all on board got out. The cause of the accident would be investigated, the U.S. military said.

     

    Related:

    Obama on N. Korea: We must deal with 'every contingency'

    Kerry in Japan: US ready to 'reach out' to North Korea

    China urges peaceful resolution of North Korea nuclear standoff

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    373 comments

    this korea crap is getting boring...

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    Explore related topics: kerry, north-korea, south-korea, featured, kim-jong-un
  • Updated
    16
    Apr
    2013
    8:01am, EDT

    Helicopter 'hard landing' near North Korea border injures 21 US military personnel

    A helicopter carrying Marines made a hard landing near Seoul while participating in joint military exercises with South Korea. All 21 Marines on board survived, though six of them remain hospitalized in stable condition.

    By Jason Cumming, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A U.S. Marine helicopter's "hard landing" near the North Korean border left 21 service members injured early Tuesday, officials said.

    The CH-53E Super Stallion chopper was "conducting routine flight operations" during an exercise near South Korea's Jipo-ri Range at the time of the incident, according to a military statement.

    All 21 personnel aboard were hospitalized but 15 were treated and released. Six remained in stable condition.

    Its crew was from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit and is stationed in Okinawa, Japan.

    South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported that the aircraft caught fire following the incident, which it said occurred about 55 miles north of Seoul. NBC News could not immediately independently verify those details.

    The military statement added: "Safety is a priority for all aircraft operations. The CH-53E has an excellent operational safety record. A comprehensive investigation will take place to determine the facts and circumstances surrounding this incident."

    Neighboring North Korea has threatened nuclear attacks on the United States, South Korea and Japan after new U.N. sanctions were imposed in response to its latest nuclear arms test in February.

    The North has also been angry about annual military exercises between U.S. and South Korean forces, describing them as a "hostile" act. The United States dispatched stealth bombers from their bases to take part. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    Kerry: China must do more to resolve N. Korean missile crisis

    Missile launch is N. Korea's exit strategy, analysts say

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 16, 2013 4:02 AM EDT

    90 comments

    I hope everyone has a rapid recovery.

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    Explore related topics: world, military, north-korea, helicopter, south-korea, us-marines, featured, updated
  • Updated
    15
    Apr
    2013
    9:16am, EDT

    Kerry: China must do more to resolve North Korean missile crisis

    Wrapping up his six-nation tour, Secretary of State John Kerry told NBC's Andrea Mitchell he's open to direct talks between the U.S. and North Korea, if Pyongyang stops testing nuclear weapons and issuing threats.

    By Andrea Mitchell and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    TOKYO -- Secretary of State John Kerry has called on China to do more to help resolve the North Korean missile crisis, saying the country provided the Pyongyang regime with a “lifeline.”

    In an interview with NBC's TODAY that aired on Monday, Kerry also said any deal with the rogue state would need to be structured so that Pyongyang could not later renege on its terms.

    In Beijing, John Kerry tried to persuade China's President Xi Jinping to lean on his ally, North Korea - arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader is now threatening the stability of the entire region. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    The crisis developed after North Korea threatened to carry out a pre-emptive nuclear strike against its enemies in response to United Nations sanctions imposed because of an underground nuclear test in February and a rocket test in December.

    In recent days the North Koreans have readied missiles for launch and some speculated this would happen on Monday, when the nation celebrates the birth of founder Kim Il Sung, current leader Kim Jong Un’s grandfather.

    In an interview in Tokyo before flying back to the U.S. on Monday, Kerry said that if the missiles were not fired “that would mean perhaps we're turning a corner and there's a possibility of moving in a better direction.”

    “Everybody understands the negative side of what happens if there is a shoot.  And my hope is that we can move in a different direction here. China, I think, is serious about this,” he said. “They understand the instability this is creating.”

    Kerry said it was “very important” for the United States to make clear to North Korea that there would be “consequences for their action” and to reaffirm its security agreements with its allies in the region.

    “That done, I think it is very important to the Chinese to focus on the fact that ... if they're not prepared to put the pressure on the North -- and they have the greatest ability to have an impact on the North -- then this can become more destabilizing,” he said. “And that instability is not in China's interest, certainly. It's not in anybody's interest in the region.”

    “So if we're going to operate according to what's in people's interest, China's and everybody else's, I believe China needs to become more engaged in this effort,” he said.

    Secretary of State John Kerry opened the door to direct disarmament talks with North Korea, but there is still no sign Kim Jong Un is prepared to stop testing nuclear weapons. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    “It is obvious that China is the lifeline to North Korea. Everybody knows that China provides the vast majority of the fuel to North Korea.  China is their biggest trading party, their biggest food donor and so forth,” he added.

    When asked about a comment by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., that North Korea had a history of breaking diplomatic deals, Kerry replied: "John is absolutely correct, that has been the pattern. And I have raised that issue with the Chinese … There has been a history of ... just playing this game and then ultimately there's cheating or a complete reneging. We are determined, I am determined to try to find if there is a different formula.  And that is a … conversation that I specifically had with the Chinese.”

    On Sunday, Kerry said the United States was prepared to “reach out” to North Korea’s leadership.

    The United States has offered talks, but on the precondition that North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons ambitions. North Korea deems its nuclear arms a "treasured sword" and has vowed never to give them up.

    On Monday, North Korean state media made hardly a mention of conflict in contrast to weeks of tirades against its enemies in what some saw as good sign.

    "South Korea and the United States have sent a message for dialogue, so for now the North is switching to that mode," Yang Moo-jin, of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told Reuters. "The North's strategic intention has been to try to get some kind of response from the United States and South Korea and now they have that. They won't be brushing away the suggestions to enter dialogue lightly." 

    'Bright faces'
    In Pyongyang on Monday, residents spilled into the streets in apparent celebration, The Associated Press reported. Girls in red and pink jackets skipped along streets festooned with celebratory banners and flags and parents pushed strollers with babies bundled up against the chill.

    "Although the situation is tense, people have got bright faces and are very happy," Han Kyong Sim, a drink stand worker, told the AP. 

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    North Korea's state-controlled KCNA news agency reported that Kim Jong Un had received a letter from the Central Committee of the Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front that praised his grandfather.

    “The life of Kim Il Sung was an epic-like one of an invincible hero who clarified the truth that arms are a lifeline of the nation and guarantees the victory of revolution, restored the country by leading to victory the hard-fought battles against the Japanese and the U.S. imperialists,” the letter said.

    The letter “pledged to join the all-people resistance to frustrate the frantic moves of the hostile forces for a nuclear war and make positive contribution to bringing about a fresh turn in the efforts for national reunification,” KCNA said.

    South Korea's Defense Ministry said it remained on guard against any missile launch to coincide with Kim Il Sung’s birth, Reuters reported.

    "The military is not easing up on its vigilance on the activities of the North's military with the view that they can conduct a provocation at any time," a ministry spokesman said. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Kerry in Japan: US ready to 'reach out' to North Korea

    China urges peaceful resolution of North Korea nuclear standoff

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 15, 2013 7:01 AM EDT

    418 comments

    Perhaps if secretary kerry were to stand on the demilitarized zone and throw his metals into N. Korea that might just show them who they are dealing with.

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    Explore related topics: nuclear, missile, north-korea, south-korea, john-kerry, featured, updated
  • 14
    Apr
    2013
    5:01pm, EDT

    Kerry in Japan: US ready to 'reach out' to North Korea

    Secretary of State John Kerry opened the door to direct disarmament talks with North Korea, but there is still no sign Kim Jong Un is prepared to stop testing nuclear weapons. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Hasani Gittens, News Editor, NBC News

    After weeks of increasingly hostile rhetoric, the U.S. is ready to “reach out” to North Korea’s leadership, Secretary of State John Kerry said in Japan on Sunday.

    The Obama administration is just waiting for the right moment.


    "We are prepared to reach out but we need (the) appropriate moment, appropriate circumstance," Kerry told reporters in Tokyo, according to pool reports.

    America’s chief diplomat added that a key component of the talks would be North Korea taking steps toward giving up its nuclear programs.

    "They have to take some actions. Now how many and how much I want to have a discussion with folks back in Washington (about)... but they have to take action," he added.

    In Beijing, John Kerry tried to persuade China's President Xi Jinping to lean on his ally, North Korea - arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader is now threatening the stability of the entire region. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    Lead by their untested young leader, Kim Jong Un, North Korea has for weeks threatened a preemptive nuclear strike against the United States, South Korea and Japan – angered by new U.N. sanctions that were slapped on the rogue nation in response to an underground nuclear test in February.

    In recent days the North Koreans have readied missile launchers, and many observers believe that a launch — which could be a harmless test or aimed at one of their enemies — will come on Monday, which is when he nation celebrates the birth of founder Kim Il Sung, Jong Un’s grandfather.

    But Kerry on Sunday tried to play down any rumors of war.

    "I think it is really unfortunate that there has been so much focus and attention in the media and elsewhere on the subject of war, when what we really ought to be talking about is the possibility of peace. And I think there are those possibilities," Kerry told a news conference in Tokyo after a meeting with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida.

    Kerry said the United States would "do what was necessary" to defend its allies Japan and South Korea, but added: "Our choice is to negotiate, our choice is to move to the table and find a way for the region to have peace."

    Sen. John McCain, a Republican, voiced skepticism about the resuming negotiations with the North.

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    "If we give them food, if we give them oil, if we give them money, they will come around and they take our money and run," he said.

    Kerry was in Japan for the final stop on an Asian tour aimed at solidifying support for curbing North Korea's nuclear program, and reassuring U.S. allies

    Meanwhile, South Korea displayed the calm it has shown throughout the crisis. In Seoul, residents on Sunday took leisurely walks on a day filled with bright sunshine, after the city's World Cup stadium was jammed with 50,000 mostly young fans of "Gangnam Style" rapper Psy.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    1120 comments

    'Kerry in Japan: US ready to 'reach out' to North Korea" I wonder how much the US taxpayer is going to get screwed on this deal?

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  • Updated
    14
    Apr
    2013
    7:05am, EDT

    Japan, US agree North Korea must not have nuclear weapons

    In Beijing, John Kerry tried to persuade China's President Xi Jinping to lean on his ally, North Korea - arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader is now threatening the stability of the entire region. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson and Becky Bratu, NBC News

    Japan and the United States cannot allow North Korea to possess nuclear weapons, Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishia said Sunday after a meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry, according to Reuters.

    Kerry is in Japan on a regional tour aimed at solidifying support for curbing North Korea's nuclear program.

    Earlier, he was in Beijing – for the first time as secretary of state – where he sought to persuade President Xi Jinping to rein in North Korea, China's traditional ally, arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader, Kim Jong Un, is threatening the stability of the entire region.

    Pyongyang has threatened for weeks to attack the United States, South Korea and Japan since new U.N. sanctions were imposed in response to its latest nuclear arms test in February, fuelling speculation of a new missile launch or nuclear test.

    "China and the United States must together take steps in order to achieve the goal of a denuclearized Korean Peninsula, and today we agreed to have further discussions, to bear down very quickly with great specificity on exactly how we will accomplish this goal," Kerry said Saturday before flying on to Japan, the last stop on his Asian tour.

    China's top diplomat echoed the goal, but wasn't specific about how pressure might be applied on North Korea, which had been threatening the United States and its "puppet" South Korea almost daily in recent weeks.

    "China is firmly committed to upholding peace and stability and advancing the denuclearization process on the peninsula," Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi said.

    "We maintain that the issue should be handled and resolved peacefully through dialogue and consultation," he added.

    Kerry declined to comment on what specifically China may do to push for a peaceful solution on North Korea, saying only that he and Chinese officials had discussed all possibilities.

    North Korea has prepped two medium-range Musudan-1 missiles waiting on its east coast, and analysts have said that it might fire one or both as a means for Kim Jong Un -- the founder's grandson -- to save face and appease his military after the weeks of saber-rattling.

    Related:

    Kerry to North Korea: We will 'defend our allies'

    Analysis: China grows weary of North Korea

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Sun Apr 14, 2013 7:03 AM EDT

    437 comments

    What is with some of you people - try staying focused for a change. What does Kerry's (or Romney's) taxes and Hanoi Jane have to do with the current situation on the Korean peninsula - absolutely nothing. If you have nothing to contribute, then don't.

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    Explore related topics: japan, world, nuclear, north-korea, weapons, john-kerry, featured, updated
  • 13
    Apr
    2013
    9:30pm, EDT

    China urges peaceful resolution of North Korea nuclear standoff

    In Beijing, John Kerry tried to persuade China's President Xi Jinping to lean on his ally, North Korea - arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader is now threatening the stability of the entire region. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    Secretary of State John Kerry and China’s top diplomat on Saturday reiterated the two countries’ commitment to denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula in a peaceful manner.


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    "China and the United States must together take steps in order to achieve the goal of a denuclearized Korean Peninsula, and today we agreed to have further discussions, to bear down very quickly with great specificity on exactly how we will accomplish this goal," Kerry said Saturday before flying on to Japan, the last stop on his Asian tour.

    China's top diplomat echoed the goal, but wasn't specific about how pressure might be applied on North Korea, which had been threatening the United States and its "puppet" South Korea almost daily in recent weeks.

    "China is firmly committed to upholding peace and stability and advancing the denuclearization process on the peninsula," Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi said.

    "We maintain that the issue should be handled and resolved peacefully through dialogue and consultation," he added.


    Visiting Beijing for the first time as secretary of state, Kerry tried to persuade China's President Xi Jinping to rein in North Korea, his country's ally, arguing that Pyongyang's erratic young leader, Kim Jong Un, is threatening the stability of the entire region.

    Kerry declined to comment on what specifically China may do to push for a peaceful solution on North Korea, saying only that he and Chinese officials had discussed all possibilities.

    On Sunday, Kerry arrived in Japan, which is in range of North Korea's medium-range missiles. He'll meet with his Japanese counterpart, Fumio Kishida, Reuters noted, as North Korea prepares for its biggest holiday -- the birthday of founder Kim Il Sung on Monday. 

    North Korea has prepped two medium-range Musudan-1 missiles waiting on its east coast, and analysts have said that it might fire one or both as a means for Kim Jong Un -- the founder's grandson -- to save face and appease his military after the weeks of saber-rattling.

    Related:

    Kerry to North Korea: We will 'defend our allies'

    Analysis: China grows weary of North Korea

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    122 comments

    China agrees in principal: North Korea shouldn't have nukes What illiterate wrote that headline? PRINCIPLE!!!

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  • 13
    Apr
    2013
    8:15am, EDT

    This is a 'critical time', Kerry tells China president amid North Korea tensions

    Secretary of State John Kerry issued a stern warning Friday, telling Kim Jong Un North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Arshad Mohammed and Ben Blanchard, Reuters

    BEIJING -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met China's top leaders on Saturday in a bid to persuade them to exert pressure on North Korea to scale back its belligerent rhetoric and, eventually, return to nuclear talks.

    Traveling to Beijing for the first time as secretary of state, Kerry made no secret of his desire to see China take a more activist stance toward North Korea, which in recent weeks has threatened nuclear war against the United States and South Korea.

    As the North's main trading partner, financial backer and the closest thing it has to a diplomatic ally, China has a unique ability to use its leverage against the impoverished, isolated state, Kerry said in the South Korean capital, Seoul, on Friday before leaving for Beijing.

    "Mr. President, this is obviously a critical time with some very challenging issues -- issues on the Korean Peninsula, the challenge of Iran and nuclear weapons, Syria and the Middle East, and economies around the world that are in need of a boost," Kerry told Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People.

    Kerry said after the meeting that his talks with Xi were "constructive and forward-leaning", though he did not elaborate.

    China had a testy relationship with Kerry's predecessor, Hillary Clinton, believing her to be too abrasive in their disagreements over everything from human rights to territorial disputes like the South China Sea.

    Pentagon intelligence has assessed that North Korea likely does have the ability to launch nuclear missiles, which raises the stakes for John Kerry, who just landed in South Korea, to find a diplomatic way out of the crisis. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    "Clinton added fuel to the mistrust during her four-year term. We hope Kerry can pull it in the other direction," China's widely read and influential Global Times tabloid said in an editorial.

    Kerry's visit to Asia, which will include a stop in Tokyo on Sunday, takes place after weeks of shrill North Korean threats of war since the imposition of new U.N. sanctions in response to its third nuclear test in February.

    North Korea has repeatedly said it will not abandon nuclear weapons which it said on Friday were its "treasured" guarantor of security.

    No sign of imminent missile launch
    North Korean television on Saturday made no mention of Kerry's visit and devoted most of its reports to preparations for Monday's celebrations marking the birth date of state founder Kim Il-Sung.

    These included a numerous floral tributes and grandiose flower show, foreign visitors seeing the sights of the capital ahead of the festivities and the unveiling of a monument in a provincial town.

    But Rodong Sinmun, the ruling Workers' Party's newspaper, issued a fresh denunciation of joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises, saying: "The outbreak of nuclear war has now become a fait accompli, owing to the U.S. and the South Korean puppet forces.

    "If the enemies dare provoke (North Korea) while going reckless, it will immediately blow them up with an annihilating strike with the use of powerful nuclear means."

    However, South Korea's Yonhap news agency, quoting a government source, said North Korea had not moved any of its mobile missile launchers for the past two days after media reports that as many as five missiles had been moved into place on the country's east coast.

    Yonhap said there had been no signs of any movement by the mobile launchers since Thursday "or that missile launches are imminent".

    U.S. 'fanning the flames'?
    Beijing has been reluctant to apply pressure on Pyongyang, fearing the instability that could result if the North were to implode and send floods of refugees into China, and has looked askance at U.S. military drills in South Korea.

    North Korea is trending online and has been searched on Google more than ever before now that the country's outlandish threats have gotten the world's attention. Kim Jong-un is still expected to launch a missile, and some analysts predict they will then ask for money not to do it again. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    China's official Xinhua news agency said in a commentary that Washington had itself been "fanning the flames" on the Korean peninsula with its shows of force.

    "It keeps sending more fighters, bombers and missile-defense ships to the waters of East Asia and carrying out massive military drills with Asian allies in a dramatic display of preemptive power," it said.

    However, U.S. officials believe China's rhetoric on North Korea has begun to shift, pointing to a recent speech by China's Xi in which -- without referring explicitly to Pyongyang -- he said no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain".

    Kerry told reporters in Seoul that if North Korea's 30-year-old leader went ahead with the launch of a medium-range missile, he would be making "a huge mistake."

    At a news conference in Seoul on Friday and in a U.S.-South Korean joint statement issued on Saturday, Kerry signaled the U.S. preference for diplomacy to end the tension, but stressed North Korea must take "meaningful" steps on denuclearization.

    The United States and its allies believe the North violated the a 2005 aid-for-denuclearization deal by conducting a nuclear test in 2006 and pursuing a uranium enrichment program that would give it a second path to a nuclear weapon in addition to its plutonium-based program.

    Slideshow: Glimpses into the hermit kingdom of North Korea

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    As chief Asia photographer for the Associated Press, David Guttenfelder has had unprecedented access to communist North Korea. Here's a rare look at daily life in the secretive country.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    John Kerry in Seoul: North Korea missile launch would be 'huge mistake'

    Missile launch is North Korea's exit strategy, experts say

    Google+ Hangout featuring NBC News correspondents in Seoul, Beijing and Tokyo

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    200 comments

    Investing in and buying from a Communist China, will come back and bite us hard. Corporate greed will surely bring America to it's knees. These people don't give a damn about us.

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, nuclear, war, north-korea, john-kerry, missiles, featured
  • Updated
    12
    Apr
    2013
    5:14pm, EDT

    Missile launch is North Korea's exit strategy, analysts say

    Alexander F. Yuan/AP

    North Koreans visit a flower show Friday featuring thousands of Kimilsungia flowers, named after the late leader Kim Il Sung, while models of a rocket and missiles are also displayed in Pyongyang.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Faced with annoyed allies and unblinking enemies, North Korea is likely to pull the plug on the current crisis by test-firing a missile or two and declaring victory ahead of a national celebration on Monday, analysts say.

    After weeks of escalating tensions and threatening nuclear war, shooting off a missile that causes no damage will give Kim Jong Un the opportunity to save face with his people -- and appease his military -- without inviting serious retaliation, experts say.

    "It's all a kind of Kabuki theater," said Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute, a libertarian Washington think tank.

    Observers caution, however, that with so much unknown about the political situation inside the secretive rogue state, it's possible that North Korea could take more aggressive action that would goad a fed-up South Korea into a forceful reaction.


    "That would be uncharted waters," said David Straub, associate director of Stanford's Korean studies program.

    Gordon Chang, author of "Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World," said Sunday is the most likely day for a missile launch.

    Before that, Secretary of State John Kerry will be in Beijing and shooting off a medium-range missile during that visit would be seen as a slap in the face of China, which has chided North Korea for its bellicose stance.

    By Sunday, Kerry will be in Japan.

    "This is going to be a launch while Kerry is in Tokyo," Chang said. "Send a missile over the Ginza [Tokyo's shopping district], humiliate the U.S., please the Chinese, who will be chortling about it for weeks."

    White House Press Secretary Jay Carney assesses the situation in North Korea saying that "there is an alternative path" available to the rogue nuclear state if they commit to their obligations.

    The next day, conveniently, is a day of enormous significance in North Korea -- the birth date of Kim Il Sung, the founder of North Korea and Kim Jong Un's grandfather.

    Korea-watchers expect there would be a declaration of a victory unrecognized anywhere else in the world, dancing in the streets, and then quiet until the drama repeats itself at some point in the near future.

    "We've been there, done that," Straub said of a possible missile launch. "Unless they lobbed these things onto Japan, there's not going to be some huge sanctions from it."

    Experts agree, however, that because the leadership dynamics in Pyongyang are murky, it's impossible to know how far Kim, or whoever is running the country, will go.

    Many believe Kim's incessant saber-rattling -- irritating even China and Russia -- is an effort to recompense North Korea's powerful military leaders and consolidate a weak power base.

    North Korea has prepped two medium-range Musudan-1 missiles waiting on its east coast, but Chang said a bolder move would be firing longer-range missiles from deeper inside the North's territory.

    Noting the hubbub in Washington over reports that North Korea may have miniaturized nuclear warheads, Chang said Kim would "roil the world" if he tested a warhead in the atmosphere.

    "I think Kim Jong Un would get a lot of credit from the generals. They would just love that," he said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Straub said his fear would be a repeat of 2010, when North Korea sank a South Korean ship without provocation, killing 46 people, and then shelled a South Korean island.

    After the 2010 attacks, Seoul told Pyongyang it would not tolerate a similar act of aggression and North Korea has heeded that warning.

    "But one worries that they might do that again or even something a little worse," Straub said.

    Bandow said the danger of trying to predict North Korea's next move is the lack of intelligence about who holds the upper hand there: Is it the party or the military? Is it young Kim, his aunt and uncle, or the generals?

    If the threats and even a test-fire are just "chest-beating" to shore up the support from the starving masses, Bandow and others aren't overly worried about the repercussions.

    "The danger," he said, "is if there really is some kind of power struggle going on, if the military wants more."

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    Kerry to North Korea: We will 'defend our allies'

    Analysis: China grows weary of North Korea

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

     

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 12, 2013 3:08 PM EDT

    560 comments

    North Korea wants an 'encroachment penalty'. Think about an NFL game. The center on Team A will try to mess up the snap count in hopes that Team B's D-line will jump first. Then when a linebacker on Team B jumps, Team A can point to the offending lineman in hopes the ref will call an encroachment pe …

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    Explore related topics: japan, russia, china, nuclear, diplomacy, north-korea, south-korea, missiles, updated
  • Updated
    12
    Apr
    2013
    7:41pm, EDT

    John Kerry in Seoul: North Korea missile launch would be 'huge mistake'

    Secretary of State John Kerry issued a stern warning Friday, telling Kim Jong-un North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Secretary of State John Kerry said a North Korean missile launch would be a “huge mistake" and reiterated that the United States would defend its allies if necessary after arriving in the South Korean capital on Friday.

    North Korea has run paratrooper drills close enough to be seen from the Chinese border.   Arriving in Seoul, South Korea, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned North Korea against a missile launch saying  the U.S. would “defend our allies and defend ourselves.” ITV’s Angus Walker reports

    Kerry also warned Pyongyang that firing a medium-range missile would be a "provocative and unwanted act."

    “Kim Jong Un needs to understand, as I think he probably does, what the outcome of a conflict would be,” Kerry said. “Our hope is we can get back to talks."

    “The rhetoric that we are hearing from North Korea is simply unacceptable by any standard,” Kerry added. The United States “will, if needed, defend our allies and defend ourselves,” he said.

    North Korea's two medium-range missiles remained fueled and ready to fire on the country's east coast Friday, U.S. military and intelligence officials said. However, there had been no heightened movement or activity by the country's military that would suggest an imminent rocket launch.


    Kerry met with South Korean President Park Geun-hye on Friday for the first of four days of talks amid speculation about North Korea’s military capabilities and uncertainty over what threat the isolated nation’s erratic leader may make next.

    The South Korean president thanked Kerry for his leadership in recent weeks as North Korea has escalated its rhetoric.

    Pentagon intelligence has assessed that North Korea likely does have the ability to launch nuclear missiles, which raises the stakes for John Kerry, who just landed in South Korea, to find a diplomatic way out of the crisis. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    “I also wish to express my appreciation for your leadership in having the recent G8 foreign ministers meeting in London issue a stern warning to North Korea,” Park told Kerry through an interpreter. “I also wish to say given the escalating tensions on the peninsula, your visit will certainly showcase how closely we are coordinating our efforts.”

    John Everard, a former British ambassador to North Korea, said Pyongyang was going to have to make a decision whether to fire or not fire their missiles soon.

    “They are liquid-fueled missiles, and the liquid that you use for such missiles is quite nasty stuff,” he said. “You can't leave the missile full of fuel because the fuel will corrode the missile.  You either have to fire it within about 10 days of fueling it or you have to defuel it, which is a messy and dangerous process. So they're coming to a crunch point.”

    “I suspect that they are planning on launching.  I don't think -- or I hope -- that the missile won't be directed at anything. I think they will probably go for a test, drop the missile into the sea," he said. "And we hope that if they do that, they don't feel the need to fly it over the top of Japan, which they did in 1998.”

    Everard added that “frankly their missiles are not that good, they are old-fashioned …  [and] their guidance systems are poor.”

    Later on Friday, South Korea and the U.S. released the following joint statement:

    The 60-year alliance between the United States and the Republic of Korea is crucial for security and stability in the Asia-Pacific region. The United States reaffirms its commitment to the defense of the Republic of Korea in the wake of recent unacceptable provocations by North Korea.

    Both sides agree on the importance of the denuclearization of North Korea, knowing that North Korea's dangerous nuclear and missile programs threaten not only its neighbors, but also its own people.

    The United States stands vigilantly by the Republic of Korea's side, and is prepared for and capable of defending and protecting itself and its allies. Both of our countries are taking prudent measures - both military and diplomatic - to enhance our security. At the same time, the two countries remain committed to the goal of peaceful denuclearization. In this context, the United States welcomes the Trust-building Process on the Korean Peninsula proposed by President Park Geun-hye.

    We will continue working with all Six-Party partners and the international community to make clear that North Korea must adhere to its international obligations and commitments or face further isolation. We will continue to encourage North Korea to make the right choice. If North Korea does so, we are prepared to implement the commitments under the 2005 Six-Party Joint Statement. But Pyongyang must prove its seriousness by taking meaningful steps to abide by its international obligations. 

    Nuclear missile capability?
    Kerry addressed a report by the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency, which was disclosed in a congressional hearing on Thursday, that said the agency has “moderate confidence” that North Korea is capable of mounting a nuclear weapon on a missile, but that such a weapon would likely not be reliable.

    U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel speaks on Capitol Hill Thursday regarding recent military threats made by North Korea.

    After the hearing, Pentagon spokesman George Little said “it would be inaccurate to suggest that the North Korean regime has fully tested, developed or demonstrated the kinds of nuclear capabilities referenced” at the Thursday hearing.

    Kerry said Friday that while North Korea has tested a nuclear device, they have not yet shown the capability to build a weapon small enough to be mounted on a ballistic missile.

    “It is inaccurate to suggest that the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea -- North Korea's official name] has fully tested, developed, and demonstrated capabilities that are articulated in that report,” Kerry said. “But obviously they have conducted a nuclear test so there is some kind of device. But that is very different from miniaturization and delivery and from tested delivery and other things. Does it get you closer to a line that is more dangerous? Yes.”

    Kerry said the United States would continue to work with allies including Japan to find other ways to de-escalate tensions, and said that President Barack Obama has ordered a number of unspecified exercises not to take place to help calm the heated rhetoric.

    As Kerry heads to Seoul, South Korea, tensions with North Korea continue to rise as it remains unclear whether or not the latest rhetoric is merely Kim Jong-un showing off his military strength. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    "We are all united in the fact that North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power," Kerry added.

    Kerry also planned to visit China and Japan on his East Asia trip. The U.S. has engaged in aggressive diplomacy with China, North Korea’s northern neighbor and benefactor, in the latest round of saber-rattling.

    Pyongyang relies on China for basic supplies like food and fuel, as well as a diplomatic link to the world, but Beijing’s good will toward the impoverished nation has recently waned. There are signs Chinese officials have tired of the North’s bellicose rhetoric, and China supported a round of United Nations sanctions following the country’s third nuclear test.

    “We do not want to see chaos and conflict on China’s doorstep,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told NBC News.

    NBC News' Jim Miklaszewski and Ian Johnston, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    Check out our Google+ Hangout on North Korea

    Analysis: China grows weary of North Korea

    Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 12, 2013 4:07 AM EDT

    887 comments

    SEOUL, South Korea -- Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in South Korea on Friday on an unusual diplomatic journey, traveling directly into a region bracing for a possible North Korean missile test and risking that his presence alone could spur Pyongyang into another headline-seeking provocation …

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  • Updated
    12
    Apr
    2013
    6:22pm, EDT

    Chinese social media mock Kim Jong Un

    From mobile bureaus in Seoul, Beijing and Tokyo, NBC's Richard Engel, Ian Williams and Ayman Mohyeldin chat about the ongoing situation in North Korea and how their missile threats are impacting the region.

    As North Korea continues its bellicose rhetoric, the U.S., as well as China and the rest of Asia are on high alert.

    A team of NBC News correspondents have been deployed to cover the potential impact of a missile launch: Richard Engel is in Seoul, South Korea;  Ian Williams is in Beijing, China; and Ayman Mohyeldin is in Tokyo, Japan.

    On Friday, they all participated in a Google+ Hangout and discussed the attitudes in their respective countries towards North Korea's rhetoric, the real potential of a missile launch and much more.

    Ian Williams weighed in from Beijing saying that the North Korea story has recently generated an “explosion of interest” in the official Chinese state media over the last few days. But what he finds even more significant is the attention the story is getting on social media in China.

    Left to right: Ayman Mohyeldin, Richard Engel, Ian Williams.

    “Social media, the Internet, is the closest barometer we have got of public opinion here in China. And they are absolutely laying into North Korea. The criticism is  – not of the U.S. – but of North Korea. There are caricatures, there are cartoons, they’ve dubbed the leader Kim Jong Un as ‘Fatty the Third’ or ‘Little Fatty,” Williams reported. Adding “It’s serious – they are questioning precisely what he’s going to stick on top of one of his missiles, questioning the military capability. But also criticizing their own leadership for their association with what they see as a Neanderthal regime whose methods are very chilling.”

    Click on the link above to replay the informative chat from three of NBC’s most experienced foreign correspondents.

    Social media serve as a gauge of public opinion in China and according to Ian Williams "they are absolutely laying into North Korea"

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 11, 2013 7:10 PM EDT

    30 comments

    I'm sure all 12 Google+ Hangout users will be there.

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    Explore related topics: japan, china, north-korea, south-korea, featured, engel, updated, ian-williams, mohyeldin
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