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North Korea rejects more nuclear talks, demands peace treaty with U.S

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un walks during an inspection of the Korean People's Army (KPA) Unit 350, in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang on October 16, 2015. Reuters Photographer

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea on Saturday rejected the idea of resuming talks to end its nuclear programme, saying previous such attempts ended in failure, and reiterated its demand that Washington come to the table to negotiate a peace treaty. The statement by the North's foreign ministry came a day after U.S. President Barack Obama and South Korean President Park Geun-hye said in Washington they were open to talks with North Korea on sanctions but that Pyongyang needs to show it was serious about abandoning its nuclear ambition. "If the United States insists on taking a different path, the Korean peninsula will only see our unlimited nuclear deterrent being strengthened further," the North's foreign ministry said in a statement. North and South Korea remain technically at war under a truce it signed in 1953 with the United States, which led U.N. forces backing the South, and China, which fought for the North. North Korea walked away from the so-called six-party talks involving the United States and four other countries in 2008 and went on to conduct two more nuclear tests. It said only a peace treaty with Washington can permanently resolve the conflict on the Korean peninsula. Obama said the United States was open to negotiations that could ease sanctions imposed on the North, just as it had done with Iran, which reached a deal in July with major powers. "We haven't even gotten to that point yet, because there has been no indication on the part of the North Koreans as there was with the Iranians that they could foresee a future in which they did not possess or were not pursuing nuclear weapons," he said. (Reporting by Jack Kim; Editing by Ros Russell)