SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA, OCT 13 -
North Korea said Monday that the remains of American soldiers killed
during the Korean War were being neglected and "carried away en masse,"
in an apparent effort to pressure Washington to resume recovery efforts
that could also lead to much-needed money for the impoverished country.
The United States suspended efforts to recover the remains of thousands
of U.S. soldiers who died during the Korean War because of the North's
plans to launch a long-range rocket in 2012. The U.S. at the time was
just starting the process of resuming excavation work that had been
suspended in 2005 when Washington said security arrangements for its
personnel working in the North were insufficient. North Korea would have
received millions of dollars in compensation for its support of the
work.
About 8,000 U.S. service members are listed as missing from the 1950-53
war, and some 5,300 of the missing are believed to be in North Korea.
On Monday, an unidentified North Korean military spokesman said in a
state media dispatch that the remains of American soldiers are "left
here and there uncared and carried away en masse" because of building
projects, land reorganization and flood damage.
The U.S. war remains "now look like no better than stones as land
rezoning and other gigantic nature-remaking projects made progress" in
North Korea, the spokesman said. "The Obama administration should not
forget even a moment the proverb saying that even a skeleton cries out
of yearning for the homeland."
Analyst Chang Yong Seok at Seoul National University said the North's
statement appears aimed at applying pressure to U.S. politicians and
officials ahead of November elections to resume the recovery project,
which could give the North a way to get foreign currency and improved
ties with Washington.
The U.S. and North Korea, which don't have formal diplomatic relations,
are still technically at war because the Korean War ended with an
armistice, not a peace treaty. The U.S. stations about 28,000 troops in
South Korea to help deter North Korean aggression.
North Korea has been seeking better ties with the outside world in what
foreign analysts say is an attempt to lure aid and investment to help
revive its moribund economy. South Korean and U.S. officials have said
the North must first take steps toward nuclear disarmament before talks
can resume.
There were signs of easing tension earlier this month when a group of
high-powered North Korean officials visited South Korea and agreed to
revive senior-level talks between the rivals. But the North last week
opened fire with machine guns after activists in the South launched
balloons carrying anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the heavily armed
border. South Korea returned fire. There were no reports of injuries or
damage.
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