NEWS
House Foreign Affairs Committee
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Ranking Republican
CONTACT:
Sam Stratman, (202) 226-7875, March 16, 2007
Lee Cohen, (202) 226-1139
For IMMEDIATE Release
Ros-Lehtinen, Royce, Manzullo Urge Caution
on Bush
Administration’s Overture to
(
U.S. Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Edward R. Royce
(R-CA) and Donald A. Manzullo (R-IL) said they would resist any attempt to
prematurely remove
Ros-Lehtinen serves as Ranking Republican on the House
Foreign Affairs Committee.
“The expeditious removal of the DPRK from the State
Department’s annual list of state sponsors raises serious concerns over the
integrity of the list, which has gained additional relevancy in a post-September
11th world,” the three wrote in the letter to Rice, which was
publicly released today.
The three members cited issues of missile technology
proliferation to nations of concern in South Asia and the Middle East, the
continued counterfeiting of U.S. currency; and the numerous kidnapping cases
involving U.S., Korean and Japanese citizens going back decades as
reasons to move cautiously with North Korea.
The three also cited the presence of Iranian observers
during the July 4, 2006 missile test launch by
”Continued counterfeiting of U.S. currency also warrants
special U.S. concern for the preservation of the integrity of our currency and
the economic wellbeing of our people,” the letter states, also suggesting that,
“Counterfeiting another nation’s currency is widely recognized as an economic
act of war.”
“The State Department’s list of terrorist states cannot be
used as a bargaining chip in diplomatic negotiations. It will ultimately
lead to a greater threat to American security in the future,” the three wrote
in the letter.
Ros-Lehtinen, Royce and Manzullo also wrote that in order to
remove North Korea from the list the United States must require the regime
cease its involvement in terrorist activities; have not engaged in
state-sponsorship of terror for the preceding 4 years; resolve all outstanding
cases of past terrorist activities (including the kidnapping of Japanese and
South Korean citizens and U.S. residents and the reported assassination of a
South Korean diplomat in Vladivostok in 1996); and abide by international
anti-terrorism agreements.
“Until these requirements are met, there is no guarantee
that
The text of the letter to Secretary Rice:
The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
The Secretary of State
Dear Madam Secretary:
In the short time the 110th Congress has been in session, the
foreign policy debate in Congress has largely focused on
The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs)
to rogue regimes or international terrorist networks constitutes an act of
terrorism.
Further, the numerous kidnapping
cases cannot be ignored as they constitute acts of terrorism. Ambassador Cofer Black, former State Department Coordinator for
Counterterrorism, stated publicly in 2004 that the Japanese abductees taken by
force to
Continued counterfeiting of
The State Department’s list of
terrorist states cannot be used as a bargaining chip in diplomatic
negotiations. It will ultimately lead to a greater threat to American
security in the future. In order to be removed from the list, the DPRK
must: (1) have verifiably ceased its support for or involvement in terrorist
activities; (2) not have engaged in state-sponsorship of terror for the
preceding 4 years; (3) have resolved all outstanding cases of past terrorist
activities (including the kidnapping of Japanese and South Korean citizens and
U.S. residents and the reported assassination of a South Korean diplomat in Vladivostok
in 1996); and (4) have signed and is abiding by international anti-terrorism
agreements. Until these requirements are met, there is no guarantee
that
We look forward to working with
you and your foreign policy team on North Korean issues, as well as any other
areas of concern, to protect and preserve our national interests.
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