US pushes Security Council on N Korea missile test June 19, 2006 Reuters Original Source: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N19329179.htm UNITED NATIONS, June 19 (Reuters) - The United States is consulting with fellow members of the U.N. Security Council on possible steps if North Korea tests a missile, U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said on Monday. Right now we are in consultation with various members of the council on what steps might be taken because it obviously would be very serious, Bolton told reporters at U.N. headquarters. But in any event we are just now in the preliminary consultations phase, he said without elaborating. Bolton's comments came after the United States, Japan and other countries warned North Korea against a missile launch as some officials said Pyongyang appeared to have finished fueling for a test flight of a missile that could possibly reach as far as Alaska. South Korean broadcaster YTN cited officials in Seoul as saying a launch of the North's Taepodong-2 missile was imminent. Bolton said Washington did not really know at this point what North Korea's intentions were. We need to wait for the event, he said. The first preference is that the North Koreans not light the missile off. We have made that clear to them, he said. Obviously we would like to know, if the North Koreans do light it off, what is under the nose cone. The United States has found itself blocked by veto-wielding council members China and Russia in past attempts to raise North Korea's nuclear weapons program in the Security Council. Twice in 2003 Washington failed to win sufficient support for a council statement condemning Pyongyang over the program. The statement would have called on North Korea to dismantle its nuclear arms program in a verifiable and irreversible manner. Washington sought the action after Pyongyang announced it was pulling out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and was enriching uranium that could be used in making bombs. Six-nation talks on persuading North Korea to curb its nuclear ambitions, involving the two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia, have failed to achieve substantive progress after several inconclusive rounds. In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters that U.S. concerns about North Korean missile activities were long-standing and well documented. The United States government has been consulting with allies in the region and has made clear to North Korea that a missile launch would be a provocative act, Whitman said.