The United States issued a sharp rebuke on Monday to Nepal's king for his handling of recent violent protests and said the decision to impose direct palace rule 14 months ago had failed "in every regard," Reuters reported. In a toughly worded statement, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said demonstrations, deaths, arrests, and Maoist attacks in the past few days showed there was more insecurity, not less, since King Gyanendra took over. "The king's continuing failure to bring the parties back into a process to restore democracy has compounded the problem," said McCormack. "The United States calls upon the king to restore democracy immediately and to begin a dialogue with Nepal's constitutional political parties. It is time the king recognizes that this is the best way to deal with the Maoist insurgency and to return peace and prosperity to Nepal," he added. The latest demonstrations in Nepal are the most intense since King Gyanendra sacked the government and took control of the impoverished nation 14 months ago.