Home>News Center>World
         
 

Rice to make Asia trip, talking about N. Korea
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-03-10 03:41

WASHINGTON - Condoleezza Rice will make her first trip to Asia as U.S. secretary of state next week to discuss with the Chinese and others how to resume talks on North Korea's nuclear program and to encourage India-Pakistan peace moves, the US State Department said on Wednesday.

Condoleezza Rice seen addressing journalists in Washington March 3, 2005. [Reuters]
US President George W. Bush has pledged to stress diplomacy in his second term and is sending Rice to the region on what will be her fifth foreign trip since taking up her post in late January.

After travel that has focused on Europe and the Middle East, where she was well-received, Rice will visit India, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Japan, South Korea and China on a March 14-21 trip, the State Department said.

"In South Asia, the secretary will highlight positive momentum in the region, including our transformed relationship with India, our continuing commitment to Afghanistan's reconstruction and our long-term engagement with Pakistan," the department said in a statement.

It said Rice would also review efforts to reconvene the six-party talks aimed at stopping South Korea's nuclear weapons programs. Japan, China and South Korea are, with Russia and North Korea, taking part in that effort.

North Korea, which announced it had a nuclear bomb last month, has refused to return to the talks since mid-2004.

India and Pakistan, which came close to war in 2002, have made peace overtures this year. The Pakistani president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, hopes in the coming weeks to make his first visit to India since 2003 and the nations plan to launch a bus service linking parts of disputed Kashmir  next month.

Rice was expected to have talks with Musharraf which could indicate how far Bush is prepared to press his case for the spread of democracy in autocratically run states. The general has been a strong ally in Bush's war on terrorism.

Rice's visit to Afghanistan follows a State Department report this month expressing concern that four years after the U.S.-led invasion to oust the radical Taliban leadership the country was "on the verge of becoming a narcotics state."



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

China to reform procedures for death penalty

 

   
 

Lenovo wins US nod to buy IBM PC

 

   
 

Corrupt officials seized and punished

 

   
 

People's congress prepared to 'fulfil history'

 

   
 

41 corpses found in Iraq; blast kills four

 

   
 

Chinese firms join Galileo project

 

   
  Rice to make Asia trip, talking about N. Korea
   
  27 children die after eating cassava at Philippine school
   
  Pro-Syria PM set to return, seek unity
   
  Israel, Palestinians dispute handover
   
  Gorbachev warns Putin of possible unrest
   
  41 corpses found in Iraq; blast kills four
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Bush nominates UN critic Bolton as UN envoy
   
Rice delays Canada visit after missile decision
   
U.S.: Terrorists in Syria bombed Tel Aviv
   
Rice urges new chapter in US-Europe relations
   
Rice: US disagrees with EU on arms embargo
   
Rice dives into middle east peacemaking
   
Rice dives into heart of Middle East peacemaking
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement