South to propose bilateral nuclear talksWASHINGTON/SEOUL: US President Barack Obama told North Korea to stick to its commitment to abandon atomic weapons, throwing his support behind ally South Korea ahead of talks to try to calm tension on the divided peninsula. Seoul announced Wednesday that it would hold its first meeting with North Korean officials since a deadly artillery attack on an island in the South in November. “On the Korean peninsula, we stand with our ally South Korea, and insist that North Korea keeps its commitment to abandon nuclear weapons,” Obama said in his State of the Union address Tuesday night. The two Koreas will meet at the border truce village of Panmunjom on Feb. 11 for preliminary military talks to discuss last year's two deadly attacks against the South's Cheonan warship and the island of Yeonpyeong. Seoul has held out the prospect of high-level military talks, possibly at ministerial level, if Pyongyang accepts responsibility for the attacks and agrees not to carry out such provocations again. North Korea denies it had anything to do with the sinking of the Cheonan and says the South provoked its artillery attack. “To establish peace on the Korean peninsula and see true development of North-South relations, the North must accept these proposals,” a South Korean unification ministry spokesman told a news briefing. The South also wants separate bilateral talks with the North to ascertain its sincerity about denuclearisation, an effort that comes as the Pyongyang urges regional powers to resume aid-for-disarmament negotiations -- so-called six-party talks -- it walked out of two years ago. Few believe the North has any intention of honouring its 2005 pledge to denuclearise, citing revelations last November about its uranium programme which give it a second route — alongside its plutonium program — to make a nuclear bomb. Washington and Beijing, the North's only major ally, have both pressed the two Koreas to resolve their latest standoff before returning to the broader six-party process. But analysts doubt the North will change its stand on the Cheonan attack, in which 46 sailors were killed, by admitting responsibility. More likely, they say, Pyongyang may indicate regret about the killings of civilians during the Yeonpyeong attack.