China is willing to work jointly with all parties to handle the nuclear issue 
on the Korean Peninsula in a cool-headed and prudent way to prevent the 
situation from deteriorating or spinning out of control, President Hu Jintao 
told visiting US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Friday. 
Hu also called for efforts to "actively create conditions" for an early 
resumption of the Six-Party Talks aimed at making the peninsula nuclear free. 
 
 
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  ![Chinese President Hu Jintao meets US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, October 20, 2006. Rice visited Japan and South Korea before arriving in China on Friday. [Reuters]](xin_57100321084690429901.jpg)  Chinese President Hu Jintao meets US Secretary of State 
 Condoleezza Rice at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, October 20, 
 2006. Rice visited Japan and South Korea before arriving in China on 
 Friday. [Reuters]
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Rice flew to Beijing after visiting Tokyo and Seoul on a regional tour to 
lobby for support in enforcing UN sanctions imposed on the Democratic People's 
Republic of Korea (DPRK) in response to a nuclear test it conducted on October 
9. 
Hu said China "firmly opposes" the nuclear test and adheres to UN Security 
Council Resolution 1718 that imposes the sanctions. 
But he stressed that China will pursue a peaceful solution to the nuclear 
issue through dialogue and negotiation. 
China "continues to advocate the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, 
opposes nuclear weapons proliferation and seeks a peaceful solution to the 
nuclear issue," he said. 
Rice said Washington is willing to solve the Korean nuclear issue which she 
called the most pressing in the world through diplomacy. 
In a separate meeting, Premier Wen Jiabao noted that "the Korean Peninsula 
nuclear issue now stands at the crossroads." 
"What course to follow is directly related to the peace and stability in East 
Asia and the world at large," Wen told Rice. 
"There is no other choice but diplomacy and dialogue," he said. 
The premier expressed optimism while emphasizing the seriousness of the 
issue. 
"All parties should, while realizing the severity of the situation, see hope 
and try to solve the crisis in a responsible manner," Wen said, adding that 
restarting the Six-Party Talks as soon as possible is an effective way to solve 
the nuclear issue. 
Rice said the United States is willing to resume the Six-Party Talks at any 
time, but Pyongyang must scrap its nuclear weapons programme. 
In an earlier press conference with Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing, Rice called 
the DPRK nuclear test "a serious provocation," which "poses a threat" to 
international peace and security. 
The Six-Party Talks stalled in Beijing last November after Washington imposed 
financial restrictions on Pyongyang. 
State Councillor Tang Jiaxuan also met with Rice earlier. Tang visited 
Pyongyang as a special envoy to President Hu Jintao on Wednesday and Thursday 
and conveyed Hu's message to DPRK leader Kim Jong-il. 
"Fortunately my visit to the DPRK this time has not been in vain," Tang told 
Rice at the start of their meeting. 
He urged the United States to take a more flexible attitude towards dealing 
with the DPRK nuclear crisis. 
Tang said all parties should "display political wisdom, pave the way for a 
return to dialogue and re-open the Six-Party Talks." 
"This is in the interests of all sides and I hope the United States will take 
a more active and flexible attitude," he was quoted as saying by the Xinhua News 
Agency. 
In talks with Li Zhaoxing, Rice said they talked about "the importance of 
leaving open a path of negotiations of the Six-Party Talks."