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N.Korea's Kim says air force ready to beat "enemy"
< (̱) μ غ >

By Martin Nesirky

SEOUL, April 12 (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong-il visited an air base just hours after Iraq's leadership crumbled and told pilots he was confident they could "beat back the enemy," the North's media reported on Friday.

North Korean television showed photographs of Kim touring Flying Unit 887 on Thursday, a day after U.S.-led forces unseated Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, whose country Washington has labelled part of an "axis of evil" with North Korea and Iran.

Pyongyang says it will be Washington's next target once the war in Iraq is over, something the United States denies.

A top Russian official said Moscow would reconsider its long-standing policy of opposing international sanctions against North Korea if Pyongyang developed nuclear arms.

Russia would oppose sanctions as long as North Korea maintained common sense, Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Losyukov told the Interfax news agency.

"But Russia will have to seriously consider its position, as the appearance of nuclear weapons in North Korea and the possibility of its using them close to our borders goes categorically against Russia's national interests."

Foreign investors are also uneasy about the drawn-out crisis over North Korea's suspected nuclear arms ambitions.

"Virtually all possible outcomes -- even short of catastrophic war or large-scale military confrontation -- carry significant added security and economic risk," said Bank of America in a research report.

In the South's port of Ulsan, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun attended the launching of the second of six planned radar-evading stealth destroyers able to carry out anti-ship and anti-submarine missions as well as eavesdropping.

In the United States, North Korea's deputy ambassador to the United Nations gave the North's first reaction to Saddam's fall.

"The result of the Iraq war gives the DPRK a kind of determination and the will to take assured measures to defend its territory against possible U.S. attacks," Radio Free Asia quoted Han Song-ryul as saying on Thursday at a seminar in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

North Korea's official name is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Han did not specifically refer to nuclear weapons, which Washington says North Korea is trying to make.

The radio station, which is funded by the U.S. Congress but not government-run, said Han had also told the seminar that, if Washington accepted its call for bilateral talks on its suspected nuclear weapons programme, it could expect "many positive steps."

REVOLUTIONARY VIGILANCE

Back in North Korea, it was unclear what kind of planes were at the unit Kim visited. The choice of base was no coincidence. The Iraqi air force has played no role in the war in Iraq.

"Seeing the pilots fully ready to cope with the moves of the enemy for aggression, he noted with great satisfaction that they are always maintaining a high degree of revolutionary vigilance and fully prepared to courageously beat back the enemy any time if he comes in attack," the official KCNA news agency said.

North Korean television showed still pictures of Kim in a grey winter coat and his trademark outsized sunglasses talking to fighter pilots at the air base.

The media made no mention of the United States by name, but North Korea routinely refers to it as the enemy.

There are 37,000 U.S. troops in South Korea alongside 690,000 South Korean military. North Korea has 1.1 million troops, many deployed near the Demilitarised Zone frontier that has bisected the peninsula since the 1950-53 Korean War.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service says the North has about 1,710 aircraft, including 60 MiG-23 and MiG-29 fighters. Many aircraft are older models, defence experts say.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS

The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency said in a report North Korea appeared last year to have the goal of building a plant to produce enough uranium for two or more nuclear weapons a year.

"Even if Pyongyang has nuclear development programmes, North Korea is a small country which cannot be a U.S. competitor in terms of nuclear weapons," Han said.

Han was speaking at a seminar organised by Harvard University and the New York-based Korea Society. The report was posted on the station's Web site (www.rfa.org) in Korean and English.

"If the United States accepts our offer for direct talks, Washington can expect many positive steps from North Korea in resolving nuclear problems," the radio quoted Han as saying.

Washington favours multilateral talks that also include China, Russia, South Korea and Japan.

"We need to seek a solution which is satisfying to both North Korea and the United States," Han said when asked whether Pyongyang would accept bilateral talks in a multilateral setting. "We need to turn impossibility into possibility."

His remarks suggested a softening of North Korea's stance that only bilateral talks would do, but it was not immediately clear whether his comments carried Pyongyang's full weight.

North Korea's Radio Pyongyang, aimed at a domestic audience, unlike Han's comments, kept up its rhetoric against the United States, saying it "would not hesitate to push the entire Korean peninsula to nuclear disaster," Yonhap news agency reported.

(Additional reporting by Nam In-soo, Song Jung-a and Lee Jung-min in Seoul and Tabassum Zakaria in Washington)



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