4187304990 say: By BURT HERMAN, Associated Press Writer\r\n\r\nOct. 10\r\n\r\n\r\nNorth Korea faced global condemnation and calls for harsh sanctions Monday after it announced that it had set off an atomic weapon underground. The United States, Japan, China and Britain led a united chorus of criticism, with President Bush saying the reported test poses a threat to global peace and security, and \"deserves an immediate response\" by the U.N. Security Council, which met to discuss the crisis.\r\n\r\nU.S. proposals obtained by The Associated Press for sanctions against North Korea include a trade ban on military and luxury items, the power to inspect all cargo, and freezing assets connected with Pyongyang\'s weapons programs.\r\n\r\nBush said he had called the leaders of South Korea, China, Russia and Japan, and all had reaffirmed a commitment to a nuclear- Korean peninsula.\r\n\r\nThe reported test came one day after the ninth anniversary of reclusive North Korean leader Kim Jong Il\'s accession to power.\r\n\r\nMembers of the 15-nation Security Council were unanimous in denouncing the claim.\r\n\r\n\"No one defended it, no one even came close to defending it,\" U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said. \"I was very impressed by the unanimity of the council ... on the need for a strong and swift answer to what everyone agreed amounted to a threat to international peace and security.\"\r\n\r\nThe Security Council had warned the impoverished and isolated nation just two days earlier not to go through with a test, and Bolton said Washington will seek U.N. sanctions to curb North Korea\'s import and export of material for weapons of mass destruction, as well as its illicit financial activities.\r\n\r\nBolton said Washington wants a resolution under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter that goes beyond the limited sanctions adopted by the council in July after North Korea conducted seven missile tests. Britain also promised to push for sanctions in the face of the Pyongyang government\'s defiance.\r\n\r\nNorth Korea\'s U.N. ambassador Pak Gil Yon said the Security Council should congratulate his country instead of passing \"useless\" resolutions or statements.\r\n\r\nIranian state radio, meanwhile, blamed North Korea\'s reported nuclear test on U.S. pressure, saying the test \"was a reaction to America\'s threats and humiliation.\"\r\n\r\nIran has said it will not abandon uranium enrichment despite the threat of international sanctions over its disputed nuclear program, which Tehran insists is purely for peaceful purposes.\r\n\r\nBush said the United States was still attempting to confirm that a nuclear test had actually taken place. Still, he said, \"such a claim itself constitutes a threat to international peace and security.\"\r\n\r\nA U.S. government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the political sensitivity of the situation, said the seismic event could have been a nuclear explosion, but its small size was making it difficult for authorities to pin down.\r\n\r\nSouth Korea\'s National Intelligence Service chief Kim Seung-kyu reportedly told lawmakers signs of suspicious movement were spotted at another suspected test site.\r\n\r\nThe current members of the nuclear club are the United States, Russia, Britain, France, India, Pakistan and China. Israel is widely believed to have the bomb but has not publicly declared.\r\n\r\nReports about the size of the explosion were conflicting. Only Russia said the blast was a nuclear explosion but the reaction of world governments reflected little doubt that they were treating the announcement as fact.\r\n\r\n\"We have no doubts that it (the test) was nuclear,\" Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said.\r\n\r\nThe Russian Foreign Ministry summoned Pyongyang\'s ambassador to Russia, demanding that North Korea \"immediately take steps to return to the regime of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty\" and to the six-nation talks. \r\n\r\nSouth Korea\'s geological institute estimated the force of the explosion to be equivalent to 550 tons of TNT, far smaller than the two nuclear bombs the U.S. dropped on Japan in World War II. France\'s atomic energy commission similarly estimated the blast measured about 500 tons, but did not confirm it was caused by a nuclear device. \r\n\r\nIvanov said it was far more powerful, equivalent to 5,000 to 15,000 tons of TNT. \r\n\r\nThe head of South Korea\'s spy agency said the blast was equal to less than 1,000 tons of TNT, the South Korean Yonhap news agency reported. \r\n\r\nThe U.S. Geological Survey said it recorded a magnitude 4.2 seismic event in northeastern North Korea. Asian neighbors also said they registered a seismic event, and an official of South Korea\'s monitoring center said the magnitude 3.6 tremor wasn\'t a natural occurrence. \r\n\r\nJapan dispatched three aircraft to waters between Japan and the Korean peninsula to monitor radiation levels, the Defense Agency said. Russia reported no increase in radiation levels in its Primorye territory, which borders North Korea. \r\n\r\nNuclear blasts give off clear seismic signatures that differentiate them from other explosions, said Friedrich Steinhaeusler, a professor of physics at Salzburg University. Even if the bomb the North Koreans detonated was small, sensors in South Korea would likely be close enough to categorize the explosion as nuclear, he said. \r\n\r\n\"I think we have to take them at their word. They\'re not the type of regime to bluff,\" said Peter Beck, Seoul-based analyst for conflict resolution think tank International Crisis Group. \r\n\r\nAlthough North Korea has long claimed it had the capability to produce a bomb, the test would be the first manifest proof that it had done so. A nuclear armed North Korea would dramatically alter the strategic balance of power in the Pacific region and would undermine already fraying global anti-proliferation efforts. \r\n\r\n\"The development and possession of nuclear weapons by North Korea will in a major way transform the security environment in North Asia and we will be entering a new, dangerous nuclear age,\" Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said at a news conference in Seoul after a summit with the South Korean leader. \r\n\r\nAbe, facing his first major foreign policy test since his recent election, called for a \"calm yet stern response.\" Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso warned such a test would \"severely endanger not only Northeast Asia but also the world stability.\" \r\n\r\nSouth Korea said it had put its military on high alert, but it had noticed no unusual activity among North Korea\'s troops. \r\n\r\nChina, the North\'s closest ally and its main source of food, expressed its \"resolute opposition\" to the reported test and urged the North to return to six-party nuclear disarmament talks. It said the North \"defied the universal opposition of international society and flagrantly conducted the nuclear test.\" \r\n\r\nRussian President Vladimir Putin told his Cabinet that Moscow \"certainly condemns the test conducted by North Korea.\" \r\n\r\nBritish Prime Minister Tony Blair said the test was a \"completely irresponsible act.\" \r\n\r\nThe North has refused for a year to attend six-party international talks aimed at persuading it to disarm, calling for the U.S. to drop sanctions it has imposed to punish it for alleged counterfeiting and money laundering. It pulled out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in 2003 after U.S. officials accused it of a secret nuclear program, allegedly violating an earlier nuclear pact between Washington and Pyongyang. \r\n\r\nThe North\'s official Korean Central News Agency said the test was successful, with no leak of radiation. \r\n\r\nNorth Korean scientists \"successfully conducted an underground nuclear test under secure conditions,\" the government-controlled agency said, adding this was \"a stirring time when all the people of the country are making a great leap forward in the building of a great prosperous powerful socialist nation.\" \r\n\r\n\"It marks a historic event as it greatly encouraged and pleased the ... people that have wished to have powerful self-reliant defense capability,\" KCNA said. \"It will contribute to defending the peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the area around it.\" \r\n\r\nSouth Korea said the test was conducted at 10:36 a.m. (9:36 p.m. EDT Sunday) in Hwaderi near Kilju city on the northeast coast. South Korean intelligence officials said the seismic wave had been detected in North Hamkyung province, the agency said. \r\n\r\nSouth Korean President Roh Moo-hyun convened a meeting of security advisers over the test, Yonhap reported. The Japanese government set up a task force in response, Kyodo news agency said. \r\n\r\nNorth Korea was added to the agenda of an already scheduled Security Council meeting that officially nominated South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon to succeed Kofi Annan as secretary-general, and he said he would work to resolve the North Korean crisis. \r\n\r\nThe Security Council resolution adopted in July imposed limited sanctions on North Korea and demanded that the reclusive communist nation suspend its ballistic missile program — a demand the North immediately rejected. \r\n\r\nThe resolution bans all U.N. member states from selling material or technology for missiles or weapons of mass destruction to North Korea — and it bans all countries from receiving missiles, banned weapons or technology from Pyongyang. \r\n\r\nBolton said the U.S. wants to make it tougher for North Korea to produce or export nuclear, chemical or biological weapons and the means to deliver them, and to impose financial sanctions for what the U.S. contends is Pyongyang\'s counterfeiting and money laundering. \r\n\r\nThe North is believed to have enough radioactive material for about a half-dozen bombs. It insists its nuclear program is necessary to deter a U.S. invasion. \r\n\r\nThe North has active missile programs, but it isn\'t believed to have an atomic bomb design small and light enough to be mounted on a long-range rocket that could strike targets as far as the U.S. \r\n\r\nSpeculation over a possible North Korean test arose earlier this year after U.S. and Japanese reports cited suspicious activity at a suspected underground test site. \r\n\r\nSouth Korean stocks plunged Monday following North Korea\'s announcement of the test. The South Korean won also fell sharply. \r\n\r\nMarkets in South Korea, the world\'s 10th-largest economy, have long been considered vulnerable to potential geopolitical risks from the North. The two countries, which fought the 1950-53 Korean War, are divided by the world\'s most heavily armed border. \r\n\r\nThe conflict ended in a cease-fire that has yet to be replaced with peace treaty, are divided by the world\'s most heavily armed border. However, they have made unprecedented strides toward reconciliation since their leaders met at their first-and-only summit in 2000. \r\n\r\nThe South had planned to ship 4,000 tons of cement to the North on Tuesday as emergency relief following massive flooding, but decided to delay it, Yonhap reported, quoting an unidentified Unification Ministry official. \r\n\r\nSouth Korea had said the one-time aid shipment was separate from its regular humanitarian aid to the North, which it halted after Pyongyang\'s missile launches in July. \r\n\r\nImpoverished and isolated North Korea has relied on foreign aid to feed its 23 million people since its state-run farming system collapsed in the 1990s following decades of mismanagement and the loss of Soviet subsidies.\r\n
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