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Bush admin allows N Korea to exclude atomic bombs from a required disclosure of its nuclear activities Nicholas Kralev President Bush canceled plans Tuesday to visit Seoul next month amid protests over U.S. beef imports, and his administration made a key concession to North Korea by allowing it to exclude atomic bombs from a required disclosure of its nuclear activities. Seoul, meanwhile, will allow the resumption of U.S. beef imports starting Thursday under new quarantine rules that will exclude meat from cattle older than 30 months, South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's ruling party said Wednesday, according to Reuters. Protesters rally against the resumption of U.S. beef imports Tuesday in front of the Defense Ministry in Seoul, arguing about the risk of mad cow disease. The writing at the top of the sign translates as "Crazy Defense Ministry." (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(Article continues below) Once the legal notice for the resumption is published on Thursday, U.S. beef that has been in frozen storage in South Korea for months could be inspected and then head to store shelves. South Korean officials said the reworked pact would increase safety checks on U.S. beef, but hours after it was announced, a violent rally erupted in central Seoul with protesters smashing police buses blocking the way to the presidential Blue House. Mr. Bush is scheduled to attend the annual summit of the Group of Eight (G-8) leading economies in Japan in early July. A stop in Seoul had been planned for months, but it was missing from Mr. Bush's itinerary when it was announced Tuesday. "We will certainly have another opportunity when we head into Asia in August" for the opening ceremony of the Summer Olympics in Beijing, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters. "But this trip will just be solely for the G-8." Protests of Mr. Lee's resumption of U.S. beef imports began last month because of fears of mad cow disease. Washington insists that American beef is safe, and South Korean and U.S. trade negotiators agreed last weekend to limit imports to cattle younger than 30 months.
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