Washington File

04 November 2006

U.S. Conducting Strategic Consultations in Asia

Under Secretary Burns to discuss North Korea, other topics

Washington – Senior U.S. foreign policy officials have been conducting wide-ranging strategic consultations with China, Japan, Korea, and other Asian nations in recent weeks and months, according to the State Department.

On November 4, the State Department announced that R. Nicholas Burns, under secretary of state for political affairs, will participate in the third round of the U.S.- China Senior Dialogue – a forum established by Presidents George W. Bush and Hu Jintao at the 2004 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting in Santiago, Chile.

"The Senior Dialogue reflects the importance and depth of the U.S.-China relationship," according to the State Department. Under Secretary Burns will hold joint meetings with senior Chinese officials together with Under Secretary of State for International Security Affairs Robert Joseph.

Burns will also visit Seoul for the first sub-ministerial session of the U.S. – R.O.K. Strategic Consultations for Allied Partnership (SCAP), which was inaugurated earlier this year by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon. Foreign Minister Ban has been selected to become the next secretary-general of the United Nations.

SCAP will address issues of security on the Korean peninsula as well as broader topics of human rights, regional cooperation, and international relief and peacekeeping operations around the world.

In a recent interview, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice indicated that one of the topics of Burns’s trip will be the implementation of U.N. Resolution 1718 on North Korea and the prospect of Pyongyang’s return to the Six-Party Talks on its nuclear program.

“We've left that path open and now we've sent two senior diplomats to the region, Nick Burns and Bob Joseph. They will go out and talk about the implementation of Resolution 1718 but also about how to make the six-party talks really fruitful when we go back to the table,” Rice said in an interview with Bloomberg TV November 3. (See related article.)

Rice traveled to Seoul, Tokyo, Beijing, and Moscow in October for talks on implementation of international sanctions against North Korea for its nuclear activities. (See related article.)

Burns and Joseph will travel to Tokyo as well for discussions on a broad range of regional and global issues with senior Japanese officials.

The press release on Under Secretary Burns' travel to Asia is available on the State Department Web site.

For more information, see The United States and China and The U.S. and the Korean Peninsula.