The US and South Korea have responded coolly to
North Korea's offer of high-level talks with Washington.
North Korea will be judged "by its actions and not its
words", a US spokeswoman said.The North proposed talks on "regional peace" with the US on Sunday, but said there should be no "preconditions".
Last week, planned talks between Pyongyang and Seoul fell through following disagreement over which delegates should attend.
Regional tensions were raised earlier this year after Pyongyang conducted its third nuclear test and threatened to attack South Korean and US targets in the region.
'Actions not words' In recent weeks rhetoric from Pyongyang has softened, but US officials appeared sceptical of its offer.
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Timeline: Korean tensions
- 12 Dec: North launches a rocket, claiming to have put a satellite into orbit
- 12 Feb: North conducts underground nuclear test
- 11 Mar: US-South Korea annual military drills begin
- 30 Mar: North says it is entering a "state of war" with South
- 2 Apr: North says it is restarting Yongbyon reactor
- 3 Apr: North blocks South workers from Kaesong industrial zone, then on 9 Apr pulls its workers out
- 26 Apr: Seoul announces withdrawal of all remaining South Korean workers from Kaesong
- 2 May: North Korea jails US man for 15 years
- 22 May: North Korea sends envoy to China
- 10 June North and South agree to top-level meeting in Seoul; talks are arranged but then scrapped
"Our desire is to have credible
negotiations with the North Koreans, but those talks must involve North
Korea living up to its obligations to the world, including compliance
with UN Security Council resolutions, and ultimately result in
denuclearisation," US National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin
Hayden said.
North Korea had to live up to its obligations on nuclear
proliferation, Denis McDonough, chief of staff to the US president, told
US broadcaster CBS news."We'll judge them by their actions, not by the nice words that we heard yesterday," Mr McDonough said.
"They're not going to be able to talk their way out of very significant sanctions they're under now," he added.
North Korean shifts from threat to dialogue are familiar fare to Washington, the BBC's Lucy Williamson in Seoul reports.
North Korea's powerful National Defence Commission had also suggested that any talks on reducing nuclear weapons would need to include American weapons as well as North Korean ones, our correspondent adds.
South Korea's Unification Ministry said its stance on talks was the same as the US.
"The window of dialogue is open but that the North should take concrete steps first," ministry spokesman Kim Hyung-seok said.
North Korea has reneged on deals with the US on several occasions in the past. In February 2012, it agreed to a partial freeze in nuclear activities and a missile test moratorium in return for US food aid.
However, it announced plans for a rocket launch in March that year - something the US called a disguised test of banned missile technology - leading the US to suspend its plans for food aid.
The US, Japan and South Korea are scheduled to meet in Washington on Wednesday to discuss resuming six-party talks on nuclear disarmament with North Korea.
The six party talks are the agreed forum for discussing North Korean denuclearisation, but have been stalled since 2009.
The US also wants a commitment to denuclearisation to be a precursor to negotiations with North Korea.
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