TOKYO
(Reuters) - Japan, the United States and South Korea agreed on Thursday
to work together to put more pressure on North Korea to get it to
abandon its nuclear and missile programmes, Japanese Vice Foreign
Minister Shinsuke Sugiyama said.
Tension
on the Korean peninsula has been high this year, beginning with North
Korea's fourth nuclear test in January, which was followed by a
satellite launch, a string of tests of various missiles, and its fifth
and largest nuclear test last month, all in defiance of international
sanctions.
"We
reaffirmed the necessity to increase pressure against North Korea to
have it give up its nuclear and missile development and realise the
denuclearization of the peninsula," Sugiyama told reporters.
Russia
and North Korea's lone major ally, China, have pushed for a resumption
of six-party talks on denuclearization in North Korea. The talks, which
also involve Japan, South Korea and the United States, have been on hold
since 2008.
Lim
said his government had decided to resume talks with Japan for the
conclusion of General Security of Military Information Agreement
(GSOMIA), a pact that would share sensitive information on North Korea's
missile and nuclear activities.
The
signing of the agreement was expected in 2012, but South Korea
postponed it amid domestic opposition against concluding such a security
pact with Japan, a one-time colonial ruler.
Tokyo's
ties with Seoul, plagued by a territorial spat and Japan's past
military aggression, have warmed after reaching a landmark agreement
last December to resolve the issue of Korean girls and women forced to
work in Japan's wartime brothels.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Nobuhiro Kubo; Editing by Robert Birsel and Nick Macfie)
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