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North Korean leader regrets nuclear test: report

Last Updated: Friday, October 20, 2006 | 12:38 AM ET

North Korea's leader has expressed regret about his country's nuclear test and said Pyongyang will return to international talks if Washington stops trying to financially isolate it, a news report says.

"If the U.S. makes a concession to some degree, we will also make a concession to some degree, whether it be bilateral talks or six-party talks," North Korean leader Kim Jong-il told a Chinese envoy, a South Korean newspaper reported Friday.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, front right, poses with China's State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan, front left, for a group picture in Pyongyang Thursday, Oct. 19, 2006. Kim told a visiting Chinese delegation that his country would return to international nuclear talks if Washington lifts financial restrictions, a South Korean newspaper reported Friday. Others are unidentified officials from both countries.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, front right, poses with China's State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan, front left, for a group picture in Pyongyang Thursday, Oct. 19, 2006. Kim told a visiting Chinese delegation that his country would return to international nuclear talks if Washington lifts financial restrictions, a South Korean newspaper reported Friday. Others are unidentified officials from both countries.
(Associated Press/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service)
Kim told a Chinese delegation that "he is sorry about the nuclear test" that North Korea conducted on Oct. 9, the mass-circulation Chosun Ilbo reported, citing a diplomatic source in China.

The delegation led by State Councillor Tang Jiaxuan met Kim on Thursday and returned to Beijing — ahead of U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's arrival in the Chinese capital on Friday.

Rice is on a round of diplomacy to Japan, South Korea, China and Russia aimed at rallying support for enforcing United Nations sanctions against North Korea for its first-ever nuclear test. The sanctions were approved by the UN Security Council on Saturday.

The U.S. hopes Chinese diplomatic efforts will persuade North Korea to return to the six-party talks, which have been stalled for the past year. China is viewed as a key in efforts to persuade the North to disarm, as it is the isolated Communist nation's main trading partner.

North Korea has long insisted that the United States desist from a campaign to sever its ties to the international financial system. Washington accuses Pyongyang of complicity in counterfeiting and money laundering to sell weapons of mass destruction.

The North has refused since November 2005 to return to the nuclear talks, which also include China, Japan, Russia and South Korea.

Pyongyang has sought bolster its negotiating position by a series of provocative actions, test-firing a barrage of missiles in July and performing the nuclear test.

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