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Top North Korean nuclear envoy Kim Kye Gwan and senior diplomat Ri Gun shook Carter's hand and then waved as the plane took off in a drizzling rain. The Carter Center, the Atlanta-based organization founded by Carter and his wife, Roslynn, and U.S. officials have emphasized that the ex-president's trip was a private humanitarian mission. Still, such visits have in the past provided an opportunity for unofficial diplomacy. KCNA said Carter met with North Korea's No. 2 official, Kim Yong Nam, who relayed Pyongyang's interest in resuming the six-nation disarmament talks and reiterated the regime's commitment to denuclearization. Carter and his party also held "an openhearted discussion" with North Korea's foreign minister and the vice foreign minister for U.S. affairs, on their countries' relations as well as denuclearization, the news agency said. Six-nation nuclear talks have been stalled since North Korea walked away from the disarmament process last year. Pyongyang, believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for a half-dozen atomic bombs in addition to a uranium-enrichment program, routinely cites the U.S. military and nuclear threat as a main reason behind its need for nuclear weapons. Washington maintains 28,500 troops in South Korea to protect the longtime ally. Carter met with Kim's father, late President Kim Il Sung, during a 1994 visit
-- friendly talks that led to a landmark nuclear disarmament pact.
[Associated
Press;
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