Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/137176.pdf#page=5> ?p ?o }
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- page=5 accessDate "2015-12-12".
- page=5 archiveDate "2013-03-06".
- page=5 archiveUrl page=5.
- page=5 date "2010-01-05".
- page=5 deadUrl "no".
- page=5 first "Larry A.".
- page=5 id "RL33590".
- page=5 isCitedBy Korean_Armistice_Agreement.
- page=5 last "Niksch".
- page=5 page "2".
- page=5 publisher "Congressional Research Service".
- page=5 quote "North Korea’s position on a Korean peace treaty contrasted sharply in three respects with positions of the Obama Administration, which Bosworth reiterated and reportedly were contained in a letter from President Obama to North Korean leader, Kim Jong‑il, delivered by Bosworth. First, as reportedly stated by Bosworth, the Obama Administration would engage in a negotiation of a peace treaty when North Korea ‘takes irreversible steps toward denuclearization’. North Korea appears to seek the denuclearization issue merged into a U.S.–North Korean peace treaty negotiation. Second, Bosworth repeated the position of the Obama Administration that U.S. normalization of diplomatic relations with North Korea would be a main element of U.S. reciprocity in return for North Korean denuclearization. North Korea rejects diplomatic relations as a quid pro quo for denuclearization . Third, North Korea’s longstanding agenda for a peace treaty and its repeated definition of ‘denuclearization of the Korean peninsula’ have focused on securing a major diminution of the U.S. military presence in South Korea and around the Korean peninsula . The Obama Administration, like the Bush Administration, never has expressed a willingness to negotiate on U.S. military forces as part of a denuclearization negotiation.".
- page=5 title "North Korea's Nuclear Weapons Development and Diplomacy".
- page=5 url page=5.