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Clinton called the investigation into the sinking "very thorough, highly professional" and "very convincing." She said both the United States and South Korea had offered China "additional information and briefings about the underlying facts of that event." "We hope that China will take us up on our offer to really understand the details of what happened and the objectivity of the investigation that led to the conclusions," she said. Earlier Wednesday, Clinton met South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and discussed cooperation on the response to the ship sinking. Lee thanked Clinton for Washington's backing, while the top U.S. diplomat replied that she came to South Korea to show her "clear and unmistakable" support for Lee and his government, according to Lee's office. As Clinton visited Seoul, the two Koreas traded new threats amid rapidly deteriorating relations. The North's military said it would block cross-border traffic heading to a joint industrial zone in North Korea if the South does not stop psychological warfare operations. It also vowed to blow up any loudspeakers South Korea sets up to broadcast propaganda northward. South Korea, meanwhile, accused Pyongyang of taking "menacing" measures and vowed to "deal with these North Korean threats unwaveringly and sternly," Unification Ministry spokesman Chun Hae-sung said.
[Associated
Press;
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