Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Obama vows U.S. will protect South Korea from North's nuclear threats

President Obama and South Korean leader Lee Myung Bak head for a news briefing at the White House on Tuesday in which they vowed to make North Korea think twice about its nuclear threats. (Alex Wong, Getty Images)

President Obama vowed Tuesday to protect South Korea from North Korea's nuclear threats, and end the North's longtime habit of firing off test missiles to win economic assistance, USA Today reported late Tuesday.

Obama said that, in recent years, N. Korea's provocations have been "rewarded" as Western countries offered fuel, food and loans in exchange for promises of good behavior that are eventually broken.

"We are going to break that pattern," Obama said after a White House meeting with South Korean President Lee Myung Bak. Obama told reporters assembled in the Rose Garden that N. Korea "will not find security or respect through threats and illegal weapons."

Lee, via a translator, said he is less fearful of a North Korean attack because of a "new plateau" of support with the U.S.

"When they look at the firm partnership and alliance that we have between our two countries, they will think twice about taking any measures that they will regret," Lee said.

The two leaders were less united with regard to a long-stalled free-trade agreement. Obama said officials are trying to work out differences over terms of trade for Korean beef and American cars.

Lee's visit came after weeks of aggressive actions by North Korea. They include a nuclear test, missile tests, the arrest of two American journalists and renewed threats against South Korea.

Sources: USA Today
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